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Community Pharmacists Vaccinate Against Cancer (CPVAC)

Arizona State University (ASU) logo

Arizona State University (ASU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Human Papillomavirus Vaccines

Treatments

Behavioral: Community Pharmacists Vaccinating Against Cancer

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04072159
STUDY00007938
5U54MD002316-12 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Latino and African American populations have a higher rate of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine initiation; however, they have a significantly less likelihood of completing the vaccine series. Pharmacists are licensed to vaccinate against the HPV virus. However, they are less likely to administer the vaccine. Although past research has recommended incorporating pharmacists to increase adolescent vaccination, no intervention studies, to our knowledge, have tested a healthcare delivery model that incorporates pharmacists to complete the HPV vaccine series. The aims of this pilot randomized controlled trial are to 1) determine the preliminary efficacy of an intervention to increase HPV vaccine series completion with the community pharmacist vs. with the primary care provider among racially/ethnically diverse participants, and 2) assess perceived intervention feasibility and acceptability of the intervention among intervention participants and primary care clinic staff.

Full description

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection, and persistent infection with oncogenic HPV strains causes cancer. Commercially available 9-valent HPV vaccines offer the potential of immunity against seven oncogenic strains and the two low-risk strains that cause over 90% of genital warts. The majority of HPV-related cancers and genital warts can be prevented through the timely uptake and completion of the HPV vaccine series. However, in 2016 only 37.5% of boys and 49.5% of girls completed the HPV vaccine series, and racial/ethnic minority youth populations are least likely to complete the vaccine series. More specifically, Latino and African American populations have a higher rate of initiation of the vaccine; however, they have a significantly less likelihood of completing the vaccine series. Past research with Latino and African American populations determined the following patient-level barriers to vaccine completion: caregivers' lack of awareness to receive additional vaccine doses, lack of time to attend an additional vaccine-only primary care clinic appointment, and other structural barriers that prohibit caregivers and their children from returning to primary care clinics for additional vaccine doses. Pharmacists are licensed to vaccinate against the HPV virus. However, they are less likely to administer the vaccine. Although past research has recommended incorporating pharmacists to increase adolescent vaccination, no intervention studies, to our knowledge, have tested a healthcare delivery model that incorporates pharmacists to complete the HPV vaccine series. We propose a randomized controlled pilot study titled Community Pharmacists Vaccinate Against Cancer (CPVAC). In CPVAC, the PI will oversample for ethnic minority (particularly African American and Hispanic) HPV vaccine age-eligible children and their caregivers to take part in the study. Patients will be randomized to the Pharmacist-Administered HPV Vaccine Series Completion group or Primary Care Provider HPV Vaccine Series Completion (control) group. After enrolling in the study, primary care providers (PCPs) of patients in the Pharmacist-Administered HPV Vaccine Series Completion group will contact the patients' community pharmacy and prescribe the remaining HPV vaccine dose(s). The pharmacy will electronically update patients' files and schedule the HPV vaccine "refill" (additional doses) at the appropriate dosing schedule. The pharmacy will contact patients' caregivers when it is time to complete additional HPV vaccine dose(s). Primary Care Provider HPV Vaccine Series Completion group participants will receive usual care, returning to their PCPs to complete the additional HPV vaccine doses. The aims of this study are to 1) determine the preliminary efficacy of CPVAC to increase HPV vaccine series completion with the community pharmacist vs. with the primary care provider among racially/ethnically diverse participants, and 2) assess perceived intervention feasibility and acceptability of CPVAC among intervention participants and primary care clinic staff. Findings from this pilot study can be used to inform a larger randomized controlled trial to examine intervention effectiveness and analyze the cost-benefit of working with community pharmacies to enhance HPV vaccine completion among diverse children.

Enrollment

33 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Caregivers of a child between ages 9-18 who has either not received any HPV vaccine doses or has received only initial HPV dose
  • Receives care at Adelante Healthcare Mesa
  • Fluent in English and/or Spanish
  • Willing to provide informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Caregivers whose child has completed additional HPV vaccine doses
  • Child is over age 18 years (no caregiver consent needed)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

33 participants in 2 patient groups

Pharmacist-Administered HPV Vaccine Series Completion group
Experimental group
Description:
For the Pharmacist-Administered HPV Vaccine Series Completion group (intervention group), primary care providers will refer patients who have received the initial HPV vaccine to receive the additional doses at patients' community retail pharmacies. Patients between ages 9-14 will need to receive one additional HPV vaccine dose with their community pharmacist 6-12 months after receiving Dose 1. Patients aged 15 and older will need to receive the 2nd dose 1-2 months after receiving the first HPV vaccine dose and the 3rd dose 6-months after receiving the initial dose.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Community Pharmacists Vaccinating Against Cancer
Primary Care Provider HPV Vaccine Series Completion
No Intervention group
Description:
Participant in the Primary Care Provider HPV Vaccine Series Completion (control group) will receive standard care and will be scheduled to return to the clinic for the remaining HPV vaccine doses.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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