对美国乳腺癌预防和筛查中可用的个性化、交互式、基于网络的临床决策工具的范围审查。

IF 1.9 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
MDM Policy and Practice Pub Date : 2024-03-17 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23814683241236511
Dalya Kamil, Kaitlyn M Wojcik, Laney Smith, Julia Zhang, Oliver W A Wilson, Gisela Butera, Jinani Jayasekera
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言。针对乳腺癌预防和筛查的个性化网络临床决策工具可以弥补知识差距,提高患者在共同决策中的自主权,并促进公平护理。本综述旨在提供有关乳腺癌预防和筛查工具的可用性、可用性、可行性、可接受性、质量和使用率的证据,以支持将这些工具纳入临床护理。方法。我们使用《系统综述和元分析首选报告项目扩展范围综述核对表》进行了此次综述。我们检索了 6 个数据库,以确定有关工具的开发、验证、可用性、可行性、可接受性测试以及在实践中的应用情况的文献。我们使用国际患者决策辅助标准工具对每种工具进行了质量评估,质量评分范围为 0 至 63 分(最低-最高)。结果。我们确定了 10 种乳腺癌预防工具和 9 种筛查工具。这些工具包括个人(如年龄)、临床(如基因组风险因素)和健康行为(如饮酒)特征。有 14 种工具包括种族/民族,但没有一种工具包括与乳腺癌相关的背景因素(如保险、就医途径)。所有工具均经过内部或外部验证。六款工具在样本中进行了可用性测试,其中包括白人(中位数,71%;范围,9%-96%)、有保险(99%;97%-100%)、大学或以上学历(60%;27%-100%)的女性。所有工具都是在学术环境中开发和测试的。有七种(37%)工具显示出在临床实践中被采用的潜在证据。这些工具的平均质量评估分数为 21 分(范围为 9-39)。结论。关于乳腺癌预防和筛查工具在不同临床环境中的测试和使用情况的证据有限。在学术和非学术环境中开发、测试和整合工具可能会提高这些工具的使用率和公平性:根据个人临床特征(如年龄、病史)、基因组风险因素(如 BRCA1/2)、种族和民族以及健康行为(如吸烟),对乳腺癌结果进行了个性化处理。这些工具并不包括可能对乳腺癌结果产生潜在影响的环境因素(如保险状况、筛查设施的可及性)。验证、可用性、可接受性和可行性测试主要是在学术环境中对受过一定大学教育(或更高)的白人和/或投保患者进行的。有关在非学术临床环境中测试和使用这些工具的证据有限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Scoping Review of Personalized, Interactive, Web-Based Clinical Decision Tools Available for Breast Cancer Prevention and Screening in the United States.

Introduction. Personalized web-based clinical decision tools for breast cancer prevention and screening could address knowledge gaps, enhance patient autonomy in shared decision-making, and promote equitable care. The purpose of this review was to present evidence on the availability, usability, feasibility, acceptability, quality, and uptake of breast cancer prevention and screening tools to support their integration into clinical care. Methods. We used the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews Checklist to conduct this review. We searched 6 databases to identify literature on the development, validation, usability, feasibility, acceptability testing, and uptake of the tools into practice settings. Quality assessment for each tool was conducted using the International Patient Decision Aid Standard instrument, with quality scores ranging from 0 to 63 (lowest-highest). Results. We identified 10 tools for breast cancer prevention and 9 tools for screening. The tools included individual (e.g., age), clinical (e.g., genomic risk factors), and health behavior (e.g., alcohol use) characteristics. Fourteen tools included race/ethnicity, but no tool incorporated contextual factors (e.g., insurance, access) associated with breast cancer. All tools were internally or externally validated. Six tools had undergone usability testing in samples including White (median, 71%; range, 9%-96%), insured (99%; 97%-100%) women, with college education or higher (60%; 27%-100%). All of the tools were developed and tested in academic settings. Seven (37%) tools showed potential evidence of uptake in clinical practice. The tools had an average quality assessment score of 21 (range, 9-39). Conclusions. There is limited evidence on testing and uptake of breast cancer prevention and screening tools in diverse clinical settings. The development, testing, and integration of tools in academic and nonacademic settings could potentially improve uptake and equitable access to these tools.

Highlights: There were 19 personalized, interactive, Web-based decision tools for breast cancer prevention and screening.Breast cancer outcomes were personalized based on individual clinical characteristics (e.g., age, medical history), genomic risk factors (e.g., BRCA1/2), race and ethnicity, and health behaviors (e.g., smoking). The tools did not include contextual factors (e.g., insurance status, access to screening facilities) that could potentially contribute to breast cancer outcomes.Validation, usability, acceptability, and feasibility testing were conducted mostly among White and/or insured patients with some college education (or higher) in academic settings. There was limited evidence on testing and uptake of the tools in nonacademic clinical settings.

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来源期刊
MDM Policy and Practice
MDM Policy and Practice Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
审稿时长
15 weeks
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