Design and Interim Recruitment Outcomes of a Multi-Modal, Multi-Level Patient Navigation Intervention for Lung Cancer Screening in the Southeast U.S.
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Lung Cancer Mortality Rates in the United States (U.S.) and in Virginia (V.A.), South Carolina (S.C.), and North Carolina (N.C.)
1.2. The Importance of Lung Cancer Screening in Reducing Lung Cancer Mortality Rates
1.3. Barriers to Lung Cancer Screening
1.4. Patient Navigation
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Institutional Review Board Approval
2.2. Participant Inclusion Criteria
- Meets current USPSTF guidelines for lung cancer screening
- Adults aged 50 to 80 years
- 20 pack-year smoking history (Note: A pack-year is a way of calculating how much a person has smoked in their lifetime. One pack-year is the equivalent of smoking an average of 20 cigarettes—1 pack—per day for a year.)
- Currently smokes or has quit smoking within the past 15 years
- Identifies as Black or African American (Note: Both Hispanic/Latino and Non-Hispanic/Latino patients are eligible as long as they also identify as Black or African American [e.g., Afro-Latino]).
- Willing to complete all navigation-related study activities
- Able to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document
2.3. Federally Qualified Health Center Partnerships
2.4. Centralized Patient Navigation Intervention
- Superb interpersonal skills
- The ability to engage in active listening with the participants
- Problem-solving skills
- Knowledge of available resources
- Familiarity with the study’s research processes
2.5. Conceptual Framework of the Patient Navigation Intervention
- Individual
- Organizational
- Economic
- Sociocultural
2.6. NCI Barrier Plan Form
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| SC3 Study | Southeastern Consortium for Lung Cancer Screening (SC3) Study |
| FQHC | Federally qualified health center |
| LCS | Lung cancer screening |
| SU2C | Stand Up To Cancer |
| USPSTF | U.S. Preventive Services Task Force |
| NIMHD | National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities |
| NLST | National Lung Screening Trial |
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| Module 1: Research 101 | Objectives
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| Module 1.2: Overview of Health Disparities in Lung Cancer Screening and Treatment | Objectives
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| Module 2: Patient Navigators: Roles and Responsibilities | Objectives
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| Module 3: Overcoming Barriers to Care | Objectives
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| Module 4: Health Literacy | Objectives
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| Module 5: Communication Exercise Tool | Objectives
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| Module 5.1: Effective Communication | Objective
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| Module 5.2: Communication and Patient Navigation | Objectives
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| Module 6: Developing Cultural Competency/Cultural Humility in Cancer Clinical Trials Research | Objectives
|
| Module 6.1: Developing Cultural Humility in Health Care | Objectives
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| Individual | Economic |
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| Organizational | Sociocultural |
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| Characteristic | SC3 Study Cohort (N = 170) | NLST LDCT Arm [32] (N = 26,723) |
|---|---|---|
| Age Group, years | ||
| 50–54 | 7.65% | 0.01% |
| 55–64 | 44.12% | 73.38% |
| 65–74 | 34.70% | 26.60% |
| 75–79 | 8.82% | 0.00% |
| Missing | 4.71% | 0.01% |
| Sex | ||
| Female | 37.06% | 40.99% |
| Male | 62.94% | 59.01% |
| Race | ||
| Black | 100.00% | 4.48% |
| Marital status | ||
| Married/living with partner | 15.29% | 66.66% |
| Divorced | 11.18% | 19.44% |
| Separated | 5.29% | 1.26% |
| Widowed | 11.76% | 7.43% |
| Single | 30.59% | 4.70% |
| Don’t know/unsure | 25.89% | 0.51% |
| Education | ||
| Less than high school | 40.00% | 6.14% |
| High school or GED | 25.29% | 23.48% |
| Post-high school training (No college) | 0.00% | 14.10% |
| Some College/Associate’s degree | 18.82% | 23.43% |
| Bachelor degree | 5.89% | 16.86% |
| Graduate School | 0.00% | 14.70% |
| Other | 0.00% | 0.85% |
| Don’t know/unsure/missing | 10.00% | 0.44% |
| Smoking status | ||
| Current | 83.53% | 48.16% |
| Former | 16.47% | 51.84% |
| Among those who quit, time (years) since quitting smoking | ||
| Within 4 years | 6.47% | 14.75% |
| 4–9.9 years | 4.11% | 17.21% |
| 10–15 years | 3.53% | 19.67% |
| Missing | 2.36% | 0.21% |
| Median pack years | 28 | 48 |
| Common Reasons for Declining Participation | Common Concerns/Obstacles to Engaging in Lung Cancer Screening | Satisfaction with the Multimodal Navigation Approach |
|---|---|---|
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Share and Cite
Ford, M.E.; Henderson, L.; Brenner, A.; Sheppard, V.B.; Wheeler, S.B.; Collins, T.; Williams, M.; Vélez Acevedo, R.; Lyu, C.; Summers, C.; et al. Design and Interim Recruitment Outcomes of a Multi-Modal, Multi-Level Patient Navigation Intervention for Lung Cancer Screening in the Southeast U.S. Cancers 2025, 17, 3633. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17223633
Ford ME, Henderson L, Brenner A, Sheppard VB, Wheeler SB, Collins T, Williams M, Vélez Acevedo R, Lyu C, Summers C, et al. Design and Interim Recruitment Outcomes of a Multi-Modal, Multi-Level Patient Navigation Intervention for Lung Cancer Screening in the Southeast U.S. Cancers. 2025; 17(22):3633. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17223633
Chicago/Turabian StyleFord, Marvella E., Louise Henderson, Alison Brenner, Vanessa B. Sheppard, Stephanie B. Wheeler, Tiffani Collins, Monique Williams, Rosuany Vélez Acevedo, Christopher Lyu, Chyanne Summers, and et al. 2025. "Design and Interim Recruitment Outcomes of a Multi-Modal, Multi-Level Patient Navigation Intervention for Lung Cancer Screening in the Southeast U.S." Cancers 17, no. 22: 3633. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17223633
APA StyleFord, M. E., Henderson, L., Brenner, A., Sheppard, V. B., Wheeler, S. B., Collins, T., Williams, M., Vélez Acevedo, R., Lyu, C., Summers, C., Scott, C., Polite-Powers, A. R., Slaughter, S. J., LaForte, D., King, D., McCoy, A. S., Zserai, J., Hill, S. S., Slan, M., ... Winn, R. A. (2025). Design and Interim Recruitment Outcomes of a Multi-Modal, Multi-Level Patient Navigation Intervention for Lung Cancer Screening in the Southeast U.S. Cancers, 17(22), 3633. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17223633

