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Efficacy of Strategies Involving Self-sampling to Reach Women Not Participating in Regular Cervical Cancer Screening (CapU4)

C

Centre Regional de Coordination des Depistages des Cancer - Pays de la Loire

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Cancer Screening Test

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: self-sampling

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05243888
2021-A01660-41

Details and patient eligibility

About

The cervical cancer screening coverage remains moderate (60%) in France. The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of two experimental invitation strategies (offer of urine or vaginal self-sampling kits) to reach under-screened populations and compare them with the current invitation strategy in rural departments (low medical density and low participation rate) in France.

The study is a randomised controlled trial with three arms: a control arm (conventional invitation letter) and two experimental arms (mailing of a urine or vaginal self-sampling kit). The target population includes women aged 30-65 years, who had no screening test recorded since more than four years and who did not respond to an invitation letter within twelve months before. The primary outcome measure is the participation rate in each arm.

A team of psychologists will also investigate attitudes and experiences by semi-structured/focus-group interviews with voluntary CapU4 participants and with health professionals.

CapU4 will identify effective strategies to reach women not responding to current screening invitations and will generate information about acceptance of self-sampling among women and health professionals.

Full description

Research question: does the offer of self-sampling kits result in higher attendance to cervical cancer screening compared to sending invitation letters which recommend women to contact a health professional for taking a cervical specimen?

Systematic reviews indicate that Human Papillomavirus (HPV) testing on vaginal specimens taken by the woman her-self is as accurate to detect cervical precancer as HPV testing of cervical specimens collected by a clinician, under the condition that a validated polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based HPV assay is used. Similar results are shown from recent studies where HPV testing was performed on first-void urine collected with an appropriate device and transport medium. A recent meta-analysis of randomised trials showed higher response rates when under-screened women receive a self-sampling kit at home compared to traditional invitation or reminder letters. However, the absolute participation rates are highly variable among studies. Whereas qualitative research indicates that women prefer collection of urine rather than a vaginal self-sample, no data are available that the offer of urine kits would result in higher participation among women who do not participate regularly in cervical cancer screening.

Objectives:

  • To evaluate the effectiveness of two experimental invitation strategies (urine or vaginal self-sampling) to reach under-screened populations and compare them to the current invitation strategy in rural departments in France.
  • To improve the response rate among women aged 30 to 65 years (not screened over a period longer than the recommended screening interval) who did not respond to a conventional prior invitation.

Trial design:

1:1:1 randomised population-based participation trial, with 2 experimental and 1 control arm, with in each arm a 1:1 sub-randomisation with subgroup A receiving a questionnaire and subgroup B receiving no questionnaire.

Enrollment

15,000 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

30 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • women aged between 30 and 65 years
  • living in the Departments of Mayenne, Vendée and Sarthe (Pays de la Loire, France)
  • who have not carried out a screening test (cytology of smear or HPV test) following a letter sent 12 months previously (in 2020 or 2021).

Exclusion criteria

  • recent cervical sampling (less than three years old)
  • women younger than 30 or older than 65 years
  • women who have had a hysterectomy
  • women with ongoing follow-up for a cervical lesion
  • women who are not members or beneficiaries of a social security system.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

15,000 participants in 3 patient groups

control
No Intervention group
Description:
The control arm corresponds to women receive a conventional invitation letter sent by post to the home address of eligible women recommending them to make an appointment to a doctor or a midwife for the collection of a cervical specimen.
vaginal self-sampling
Experimental group
Description:
eligible women receive at their home address a vaginal self-sampling kit in addition to the conventional invitation letter
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: self-sampling
urinary self-sampling
Experimental group
Description:
eligible women receive at their home address a urine collection kit in addition to the conventional invitation letter
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: self-sampling

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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