Effect of an Educational Intervention on Women’s Health Care Provider Knowledge Gaps About Breast Cancer Risk Model Use and High-risk Screening Recommendations
Abstract Objective To assess effectiveness of a web-based educational intervention on women’s health care provider knowledge of breast cancer risk models and high-risk screening recommendations. Methods A web-based pre- and post-test study including 177 U.S.-based women’s health care providers was c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of breast imaging 2023-02, Vol.5 (1), p.30-39 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Objective
To assess effectiveness of a web-based educational intervention on women’s health care provider knowledge of breast cancer risk models and high-risk screening recommendations.
Methods
A web-based pre- and post-test study including 177 U.S.-based women’s health care providers was conducted in 2019. Knowledge gaps were defined as fewer than 75% of respondents answering correctly. Pre- and post-test knowledge differences (McNemar test) and associations of baseline characteristics with pre-test knowledge gaps (logistic regression) were evaluated.
Results
Respondents included 131/177 (74.0%) physicians; 127/177 (71.8%) practiced obstetrics/gynecology. Pre-test, 118/177 (66.7%) knew the Gail model predicts lifetime invasive breast cancer risk; this knowledge gap persisted post-test [(121/177, 68.4%); P = 0.77]. Just 39.0% (69/177) knew the Gail model identifies women eligible for risk-reducing medications; this knowledge gap resolved. Only 48.6% (86/177) knew the Gail model should not be used to identify women meeting high-risk MRI screening guidelines; this deficiency decreased to 66.1% (117/177) post-test (P = 0.001). Pre-test, 47.5% (84/177) knew the Tyrer-Cuzick model is used to identify women meeting high-risk screening MRI criteria, 42.9% (76/177) to predict BRCA1/2 pathogenic mutation risk, and 26.0% (46/177) to predict lifetime invasive breast cancer risk. These knowledge gaps persisted but improved. For a high-risk 30-year-old, 67.8% (120/177) and 54.2% (96/177) pre-test knew screening MRI and mammography/tomosynthesis are recommended, respectively; 19.2% (34/177) knew both are recommended; and 53% (94/177) knew US is not recommended. These knowledge gaps resolved or reduced.
Conclusion
Web-based education can reduce important provider knowledge gaps about breast cancer risk models and high-risk screening recommendations. |
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ISSN: | 2631-6110 2631-6129 |
DOI: | 10.1093/jbi/wbac072 |