Status
Conditions
About
This study will focus on the primary objectives:
This study will also focus on the secondary objectives:
Full description
Effective vaccination is now available to prevent human papillomavirus (HPV), the most common sexually transmitted infection and the cause of cervical cancer, the second most common cancer among women worldwide. HPV vaccine uptake is particularly important for females surviving childhood cancer, many of whom are at high risk for HPV complications due to the direct and indirect effects of cancer treatment. Thus, Version 3.0 of the Children's Oncology Group Long-Term Follow-Up Guidelines for Survivors of Childhood, Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer has recently recommended HPV vaccination for all eligible females surviving childhood cancer. Because this vaccine was only FDA approved in 2006, little is known about the complexity of vaccination uptake among those surviving cancer, and how the factors influencing vaccination decision-making differ among families with and without a history of pediatric cancer.
The purpose of this exploratory study is to estimate the prevalence of HPV vaccination and to assess predictors of HPV vaccination (and intent) among 9-26 year old females who have survived childhood cancer, while making comparisons to healthy acquaintance controls. In a cross-sectional design, those surviving childhood cancer (and acquaintance controls) will be asked to complete a questionnaire which queries sociodemographic, medical, and psychological variables which may relate to HPV vaccination or intent. Current vaccination rates will be examined and factors which associate with HPV vaccination (and intent) will be identified. Findings of the present study will inform recruitment strategies for future studies examining the immunogenicity, safety, tolerability, and behavioral outcomes of HPV vaccination among females surviving childhood cancer. More immediately, this work will further our understanding of familial decision-making regarding HPV vaccination among female survivors of childhood cancer and will determine whether vaccination recruitment models developed for healthy adolescents and young adults generalize to the pediatric cancer population.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria- Mothers of ACT patients
Inclusion criteria for acquaintance control participants:
An acquaintance control sample will be comprised of a community sample of adult women (aged 18-26 years) and mothers with daughters in the 9-17 year age range who are acquainted with the ACT patient's family.The primary feature distinguishing the acquaintance controls from the SJCRH sample is the presence/nonpresence of personal (for controls aged 18-26) or daughter's (for maternal controls) cancer history.
The following represents the inclusion criteria for acquaintance control participants:
According to institutional and NIH policy, the study will approach and consent research participants regardless of ethnic background.Institutional experience confirms broad representation in this regard.
Exclusion Criteria for acquaintance control group
*Personal history of cancer (for controls aged 18-26 years) or history of having a child diagnosed with cancer (for maternal controls with daughters aged 9-17 years)
A supplemental community control sample (meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria outlined above) will also be utilized via the subject pool in the Department of Psychology at The University of Memphis.
587 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal