Back to Search Start Over

Recruitment for an efficacy study in chemoprevention—The concerned smoker study

Authors :
Barbara Stoskopf
Mark Levine
Andrew Arnold
William Hryniuk
B. Johnstone
George P. Browman
Peter Skingley
Source :
Preventive Medicine. 18:700-710
Publication Year :
1989
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1989.

Abstract

Efficacy studies are important for the development of long-term cancer prevention strategies. Recruitment aims for a highly motivated group of participants. The Concerned Smoker Study is aimed at smokers with at least a 15 pack-year history and bronchial atypia on sputum sampling Recruitment has been primarily through use of the media. During the first year of randomization 905 potential participants expressed interest. Of these, 80 were eventually randomized. With over 60 participants having completed the study only one has defaulted and compliance with the study protocol has been high. Participants became aware of the study through the following sources: daily newspaper 36.6%, weekly newspaper 16.2%, television 14.9%, radio 13.8%, community television 1.3%, other sources 13.3%. Over 90% of potential participants who initially express interest in such a chemoprevention project may not ultimately be suitable. The population chosen for such studies may not be very representative of the more general population; however, a high degree of compliance can be obtained which will provide valuable information on treatment efficacy.

Details

ISSN :
00917435
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Preventive Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c49b3ecdb779d5ad889d018ee200a4fa