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Home-based Self-sampling for Cervical Cancer Prevention Education Intervention in Ghana (HOPE-inG)

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Baylor University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Implementation Science
Self-sampling
HIV
Cervical Cancer Screening
Intervention (Training) Condition
Implementation Strategies

Treatments

Behavioral: Control Group
Behavioral: Health providers and management at IG sites will receive ISS (i.e., management support, capacity-building, and social network support) and training on the HOPE implementation plan

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT06800664
1U01CA294757-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators propose to develop and/or adapt implementation strategies and a structured implementation plan to translate the HOPE intervention into existing healthcare practice in Ghana.

These "implementation support strategies (ISS)" are implementation strategies relevant to implementation support, which is concerned with moving (implementation) research into (implementation) practice.

The ultimate goal is to facilitate health system adoption and sustainment.

Full description

Over 69,000 women living with HIV, (WLWH) in Ghana have a six-fold increased risk of developing cervical cancer and require early and frequent cervical cancer screening (CCS). However, available data in Ghana show that the CCS rate among eligible women is as low as 2.7%, and there is no evidence that WLWH screen at higher rates. In response to the need to increase the uptake of CCS among WLWH, the investigators developed a Home-based self-sampling for cervical cancer Prevention Education (HOPE) intervention. HOPE consists of HPV self-sampling combined with a 3R (Reframing, Reprioritizing, and Reforming) communication model for promoting CCS. In a randomized controlled trial (RCT) in Ghana, the investigators demonstrated that HOPE significantly increased CCS among WLWH (100%) vs routine clinic-based screening (14.64%). Participating women found the self-sampling and 3R communication model acceptable and culturally appropriate. High-impact implementation strategies are needed to integrate and scale up HPV self-sampling into women's healthcare in Ghana. The investigators propose to develop and/or adapt implementation strategies to maximize the success of the HOPE intervention in increasing its health system adoption, patient uptake, and the sustainment of CCS among WLWH. The investigators' proposed hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation RCT trial will leverage existing relationships with secondary-level health facilities in Ghana. The investigators will select four secondary-level health facilities with comparable infrastructure and WLWH patient enrollment. Using the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment (EPIS) framework, the investigators will address the following specific aims.

Aim 1: To develop a culturally appropriate, evidence-based health system implementation plan and provider training content for successful HOPE implementation (Preparation phase). Through nominal group techniques (NGTs), the investigators will support engaged stakeholders in selecting, prioritizing, and adapting culturally appropriate implementation support strategies (ISS) for HOPE. Through NGTs, the investigators will modify HOPE and adopt HOPE 2.0

Aim 2: Assess the effectiveness of the HOPE 2.0 intervention and the success of the implementation plan in a hybrid type 2 trial (Implementation phase). The investigators will conduct a hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation RCT to evaluate the impact of implementation strategies. Four HIV secondary-level clinics will be cluster-randomized 1:1 in a two-arm RCT. Healthcare providers in the intervention group (IG, Arm 1) will receive evidence-based training validated in Aim 1. After training, trained providers will recruit WLWH (n = 576) from their HIV facilities and implement HOPE. Providers in the control group (CG, Arm 2) who will not be trained with our ISS materials will recruit WLWH (n = 576) and implement HOPE in their clinics.

Aim 3: Assess the impact of the implementation plan on the sustainment of the HOPE intervention at study sites (Sustainment phase). The investigators will assess the impact of HOPE on WLWH screening behaviors and the impact of strategy material on providers' self-efficacy for implementing HOPE across the study arms.

Enrollment

1,500 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

General criteria

  • ability to give consent per Institutional Review Board stipulations

  • residing in the Central Region

  • having no medical characteristics that would interfere with the ability to participate fully

  • the willingness to participate in this study.

    (a) Healthcare provider eligibility: Inclusion criteria include an individual (no gender restrictions) who

  • possesses healthcare qualifications (i.e., patient navigators, physicians, nurses, health facility management),

  • works at the HIV health facility at study sites,

  • is ≥18 years old. (b) Eligibility for women living with HIV (Patients)

  • identified female at birth) who

  • are living with HIV between 25 and 65 years old (age consistent with WHO CC screening guidelines)

  • have never had CC screening (Pap or HPV test),

  • have not had a screening for the past 5 years

Exclusion criteria

  • Women will be excluded if they are pregnant or have had a hysterectomy.
  • WLWH who have a cervix are the main target population to develop the HOPE toolkit.
  • Women who are below 25 and those who are above 65 years will be excluded.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

1,500 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
Health providers and management at IG sites will receive ISS (i.e., management support, capacity-building, and social network support) and training on the HOPE implementation plan
Treatment:
Behavioral: Health providers and management at IG sites will receive ISS (i.e., management support, capacity-building, and social network support) and training on the HOPE implementation plan
Behavioral: Control Group
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Providers and management in the control group will not receive any ISS or implementation plan training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dorcas Obiri-Yeboah, PhD; Matthew Asare, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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