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Article ; Online: Decision aid and cost compensation influence uptake of PSA-based early detection without affecting decisional conflict

Dorothee Tiedje / Matthias Borowski / Alexandra Simbrich / Kathrin Schlößler / Klaus Kruse / Christiane Bothe / Katrin Kuss / Charles Christian Adarkwah / Peter Maisel / Ralf Jendyk / Marc-André Kurosinski / Joachim Gerß / Christian Tschuschke / Ralf Becker / Monique J. Roobol / Chris H. Bangma / Hans-Werner Hense / Norbert Donner-Banzhoff / Axel Semjonow

Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-

a cluster randomised trial

2021  Volume 10

Abstract: Abstract International guidelines recommend to inform men about the benefits and harms of prostate specific antigen (PSA) based early detection of prostate cancer. This study investigates the influence of a transactional decision aid (DA) or cost ... ...

Abstract Abstract International guidelines recommend to inform men about the benefits and harms of prostate specific antigen (PSA) based early detection of prostate cancer. This study investigates the influence of a transactional decision aid (DA) or cost compensation (CC) for a PSA test on the decisional behaviour of men. Prospective, cluster-randomised trial to compare two interventions in a 2 × 2 factorial design: DA versus counselling as usual, and CC versus noCC for PSA-testing. 90 cluster-randomised physicians in the administrative district of Muenster, Germany recruited 962 participants aged 55–69 yrs. in 2018. Primary endpoint: the influence of the DA and CC on the decisional conflict. Secondary endpoints: factors which altered the involvement of the men regarding their decision to take a PSA-test. The primary endpoint was analysed by a multivariate regression model. The choice to take the PSA test was increased by CC and reduced by the DA, the latter also reduced PSA uptake in men who were offered CC. The DA led to an increase of the median knowledge about early detection, changed willingness to perform a PSA test without increasing the level of shared decision, giving participants a stronger feeling of having made the decision by themselves. The DA did not alter the decisional conflict, as it was very low in all study groups. DA reduced and CC increased the PSA uptake. The DA seemed to have a greater impact on the participants than CC, as it led to fewer PSA tests even if CC was granted. Trial registration: German Clinical Trial Register (Deutsches Register Klinischer Studien DRKS00007687). Registered: 06/05/2015. https://www.drks.de/drks_web/navigate.do?navigationId=trial.HTML&TRIAL_ID=DRKS00007687 .
Keywords Medicine ; R ; Science ; Q
Language English
Publishing date 2021-12-01T00:00:00Z
Publisher Nature Portfolio
Document type Article ; Online
Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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