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The COMPASs Study: Community Preferences for Prostate cAncer Screening. Protocol for a quantitative preference study: Figure 1

Authors :
Michelle Cunich
Michael Pignone
Glenn Salkeld
Manish I. Patel
Graham J. Mann
Kirsten Howard
Source :
BMJ Open. 2:e000587
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
BMJ, 2012.

Abstract

Background Prostate cancer screening using prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing remains controversial. Trade-offs between the potential benefits and downsides of screening must be weighed by men deciding whether to participate in prostate cancer screening; little is known about benefit:harm trade-offs men are willing to accept. Methods/Design The Community Preferences for Prostate Cancer Screening (COMPASs) Study examines Australian men9s preferences for prostate cancer screening using PSA testing. The aims are to (1) determine which factors influence men9s decision to participate in prostate cancer screening or not and (2) determine the extent of trade-offs between benefits and harms that men are willing to accept in making these decisions. Quantitative methods will be used to assess men9s preferences for PSA screening. Using data on the quantitative outcomes of PSA testing from the published literature, a discrete choice study will be designed to quantitatively assess men9s preferences. A web-based survey will be conducted in approximately 1000 community respondents aged 40–69 years, stratified by family history of prostate cancer, to assess men9s preferences for PSA testing. A mixed logit model will be used; model results will be expressed as parameter estimates (β) and the odds of choosing screening over no screening. Trade-offs between attributes will also be calculated. Ethics and Dissemination The COMPASs study has been approved by the University of Sydney, Human Research Ethics committee (Protocol number 13186). The results will be published in internal reports, in peer-reviewed scientific journals as well as via conference presentations.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7b10bf9ea1901f49c0696c418b1af212
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2011-000587