TY - JOUR
T1 - Enrolling people of color to evaluate a practice intervention
T2 - lessons from the shared decision-making for atrial fibrillation (SDM4AFib) trial
AU - for the Shared Decision-Making for Atrial Fibrillation (SDM4AFib) Trial Investigators
AU - Sivly, Angela
AU - Gorr, Haeshik S.
AU - Gravholt, Derek
AU - Branda, Megan E.
AU - Linzer, Mark
AU - Noseworthy, Peter
AU - Hargraves, Ian
AU - Kunneman, Marleen
AU - Doubeni, Chyke A.
AU - Suzuki, Takeki
AU - Brito, Juan P.
AU - Jackson, Elizabeth A.
AU - Burnett, Bruce
AU - Wambua, Mike
AU - Montori, Victor M.
AU - Montori, Victor M.
AU - Fleming, Kirsten
AU - Gorr, Haeshik
AU - Hess, Erik
AU - IV Hamilton, James
AU - Noseworthy, Peter A.
AU - Haffke, Alexander
AU - Muegge, Jule
AU - Poplau, Sara
AU - Simpson, Benjamin
AU - Vang, Miamoua
AU - Anderson, Joel
AU - Behnken, Emma
AU - Bellolio, Fernanda
AU - Cabalka, Renee
AU - Ferrara, Michael
AU - Giblon, Rachel
AU - Inselman, Jonathan
AU - LeBlanc, Annie
AU - Lee, Alexander
AU - Montori, Victor
AU - Olive, Marc
AU - Organick, Paige
AU - Shah, Nilay
AU - Spencer-Bonilla, Gabriela
AU - Stier, Amy
AU - Thota, Anjali
AU - Ting, Henry
AU - Vanmeter, Derek
AU - Zeballos-Palacios, Claudia
AU - Abullarade, Carol
AU - Harvey, Lisa
AU - Keune, Shelly
AU - Smith, Timothy
AU - McBane, Robert
N1 - Funding Information:
N/A. Shared Decision-Making for Atrial Fibrillation (SDM4AFib) Trial Investigators: steering committee: Principal investigator: Victor M. Montori, MD, MSc; study statistician: Megan E. Branda, MS; coinvestigators: Juan P. Brito, MD, MSc, Marleen Kunneman, PhD, and Ian Hargraves, PhD; study coordinator: Angela Sivly, CCRP; study manager: Kirsten Fleming, BA; site principal investigators: Bruce Burnett, MD (Park Nicollet Health Partners, Minneapolis, Minnesota), Mark Linzer, MD, and Haeshik Gorr, MD (Hennepin Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota), Elizabeth A. Jackson, MD, and Erik Hess, MD (University of Alabama at Birmingham), Takeki Suzuki, MD, MPH, PhD, and James Hamilton IV, MD (University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson), and Peter A. Noseworthy, MD (Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota). Site teams (in alphabetical order): Hennepin Health: Haeshik Gorr, MD, Alexander Haffke, BS, Mark Linzer, MD, Jule Muegge, MPH, Sara Poplau, BA, Benjamin Simpson, BS, Miamoua Vang, BS, and Mike Wambua, MS. Mayo Clinic: Joel Anderson, MPH, Emma Behnken, BA, Fernanda Bellolio, MD, Juan P. Brito, MD, MSc, Renee Cabalka, BS, Michael Ferrara, MS, Kirsten Fleming, BA, Rachel Giblon, MS, Ian Hargraves, PhD, Jonathan Inselman, MS, Marleen Kunneman, PhD, Annie LeBlanc, PhD, Alexander Lee, BS, Victor Montori, MD, MSc, Peter A. Noseworthy, MD, Marc Olive, BA, Paige Organick, BA, Nilay Shah, PhD, Angela Sivly, CCRP, Gabriela Spencer-Bonilla, MD, Amy Stier, CNP, Anjali Thota, BA, Henry Ting, MD, Derek Vanmeter, and Claudia Zeballos-Palacios, MD. Park Nicollet Health Partners : Carol Abullarade, RN-BC, CACP, Bruce Burnett, MD, Lisa Harvey, RD, and Shelly Keune, BSN, RN. University of Alabama at Birmingham: Elizabeth A. Jackson, MD, Erik Hess, MD, MSc, Timothy Smith, CRNP, and Shannon Stephens, EMTP. University of Mississippi Medical Center : Bryan Barksdale, MA, James Hamilton IV, MD, Theresa Hickey, Roma Peters, FNP, Memrie Price, BSc, Takeki Suzuki, MD, MPH, PhD, Connie Watson, BA, and Douglas Wolfe, MD. Data safety and monitoring board: Gordon Guyatt, MD (chair), Brian Haynes, MD, and George Tomlinson, PhD. Expert advisory panel: Paul Daniels, MD, Bernard Gersh, MD, Erik Hess, MD, MSc, Thomas Jaeger, MD, Robert McBane, MD, and Peter A. Noseworthy, MD (chair).
Funding Information:
The clinical trial was funded by grant RO1 HL131535–01 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Background: Trial recruitment of Black, indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) is key for interventions that interact with socioeconomic factors and cultural norms, preferences, and values. We report on our experience enrolling BIPOC participants into a multicenter trial of a shared decision-making intervention about anticoagulation to prevent strokes, in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Methods: We enrolled patients with AF and their clinicians in 5 healthcare systems (three academic medical centers, an urban/suburban community medical center, and a safety-net inner-city medical center) located in three states (Minnesota, Alabama, and Mississippi) in the United States. Clinical encounters were randomized to usual care with or without a shared decision-making tool about anticoagulation. Analysis: We analyzed BIPOC patient enrollment by site, categorized reasons for non-enrollment, and examined how enrollment of BIPOC patients was promoted across sites. Results: Of 2247 patients assessed, 922 were enrolled of which 147 (16%) were BIPOC patients. Eligible Black participants were significantly less likely (p <.001) to enroll (102, 11%) than trial-eligible White participants (185, 15%). The enrollment rate of BIPOC patients varied by site. The inclusion and prioritization of clinical practices that care for more BIPOC patients contributed to a higher enrollment rate into the trial. Specific efforts to reach BIPOC clinic attendees and prioritize their enrollment had lower yield. Conclusions: Best practices to optimize the enrollment of BIPOC participants into trials that examined complex and culturally sensitive interventions remain to be developed. This study suggests a high yield from enrolling BIPOC patients from practices that prioritize their care. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02905032).
AB - Background: Trial recruitment of Black, indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) is key for interventions that interact with socioeconomic factors and cultural norms, preferences, and values. We report on our experience enrolling BIPOC participants into a multicenter trial of a shared decision-making intervention about anticoagulation to prevent strokes, in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Methods: We enrolled patients with AF and their clinicians in 5 healthcare systems (three academic medical centers, an urban/suburban community medical center, and a safety-net inner-city medical center) located in three states (Minnesota, Alabama, and Mississippi) in the United States. Clinical encounters were randomized to usual care with or without a shared decision-making tool about anticoagulation. Analysis: We analyzed BIPOC patient enrollment by site, categorized reasons for non-enrollment, and examined how enrollment of BIPOC patients was promoted across sites. Results: Of 2247 patients assessed, 922 were enrolled of which 147 (16%) were BIPOC patients. Eligible Black participants were significantly less likely (p <.001) to enroll (102, 11%) than trial-eligible White participants (185, 15%). The enrollment rate of BIPOC patients varied by site. The inclusion and prioritization of clinical practices that care for more BIPOC patients contributed to a higher enrollment rate into the trial. Specific efforts to reach BIPOC clinic attendees and prioritize their enrollment had lower yield. Conclusions: Best practices to optimize the enrollment of BIPOC participants into trials that examined complex and culturally sensitive interventions remain to be developed. This study suggests a high yield from enrolling BIPOC patients from practices that prioritize their care. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02905032).
KW - BIPOC
KW - Complex interventions
KW - Diversity
KW - Enrollment
KW - Equity
KW - Minorities
KW - Practice-based trials
KW - Shared decision-making
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85136343237&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85136343237&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12913-022-08399-z
DO - 10.1186/s12913-022-08399-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 35962351
AN - SCOPUS:85136343237
SN - 1472-6963
VL - 22
JO - BMC health services research
JF - BMC health services research
IS - 1
M1 - 1032
ER -