Background
Ethnic minorities, especially African Americans and Latinos, bear a disproportionate burden of colorectal cancer (CRC) reflected in incidence, cancer stage and mortality statistics. In all ethnic groups first-degree relatives (FDRs) of CRC cases are at elevated disease risk. However, underutilization of CRC screening persists and is particularly evident among minority groups. This study tested a stepped intervention to increase CRC screening among an ethnically diverse sample of FDRs of CRC cases.
Methods
A statewide cancer registry was used to recruit CRC cases and through them their FDRs. Relatives not current on CRC screening were randomized to intervention or usual-care control arms. The stepped intervention consisted of ethnically-targeted and individually-tailored print materials followed by telephone counseling for those unscreened at 6 months.
Results
The sample (N=1280) consisted of 403 Latino, 284 African American, 242 Asian, and 351 White FDRs. Statistically significant effects were observed for the cumulative print+telephone intervention at 12-months (26% intervention vs.18% control) and the print intervention alone at 6 months (15% intervention vs. 10% control). The effect of the print alone versus the cumulative interventions was not significantly different. Stratified analyses indicated that the intervention was effective among Whites, Latinos, and Asians, but not among African-Americans.
Conclusion
Overall, the intervention was effective in increasing in screening rates. Oversampling racial/ethnic minorities allowed for examination of effects within subgroups, revealing no effect among African Americans. This finding illustrates the importance of including sufficient numbers of participants from diverse ethnic sub-groups in intervention research, to enable such stratified analyses.