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One-Way Text Messages versus No Text Messages on Attendance to Follow-Up Cervical Cancer Screening Among HPV-Positive Tanzanian Women (Connected2Care): A Parallel-Group Randomised Controlled Trial

21 Pages Posted: 20 Jun 2019

See all articles by Ditte Linde

Ditte Linde

University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Clinical Research; Odense University Hospital - Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology; University of Southern Denmark - Odense Patient Data Explorative Network (OPEN)

Marianne S Andersen

Odense University Hospital - Department of Endocrinology

Julius D. Mwaiselage

Ocean Road Cancer Institute

Rachel Manongi

Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College

Susanne K. Kjaer

Government of the Kingdom of Denmark - Rigshospitalet University Hospital; Danish Cancer Society Research Centre - Unit of Virus, Lifestyle and Genes

Vibeke Rasch

University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Clinical Research

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Abstract

Background: Rapid HPV DNA testing is an emerging cervical cancer screening strategy in resource-limited countries, yet it requires follow-up of women who test HPV-positive. We conducted a randomised controlled trial to determine if one-way text messages improved attendance to a 14-months follow-up cervical cancer screening among HPV-positive women.

Methods: This multi-centre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial was conducted at three hospitals in Tanzania. Eligible participants were between 25-60 years, had tested positive to a rapid HPV-test during a patient-initiated screening, been informed of their HPV-result, and had a private mobile phone with a valid number. Participants were randomly assigned 1:1 into the intervention or control group through an incorporated algorithm in the text message system. The intervention group received one-way text messages, and the control group received no text messages. The primary outcome was attendance to a 14-months health provider-initiated follow-up screening. Participants were not blinded but outcome assessors were. The analysis was intention-to-treat.

Findings: Between August 2015 and July 2017, 4080 women were screened for cervical cancer of which 705 were included into this trial; 358 were allocated to the intervention group and 347 to the control group. Sixteen women were excluded prior to analysis due to developing cervical cancer or dying (eight from each group). In the intervention group, 84 women (24%) attended their follow-up screening, and in the control group 80 women (24%) attended (RR: 1·02; 95% CI: 0·79-1·33).

Interpretation: Attendance to a health provider-initiated follow-up cervical cancer screening among HPV-positive women was strikingly low, and one-way text messages did not improve the attendance rate. Implementation of rapid HPV-testing at clinic level in Tanzania entails a challenge of ensuring a proper follow-up of women.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov;NCT02509702; active, not recruiting.

Funding Statement: The study is funded by the Danish International Development Agency (Danida; 14-P02-Tan/A26775) and the University of Southern Denmark (internal funds).

Declaration of Interests: There are no competing interests for any of the authors.

Ethics Approval Statement: The study protocol has been published elsewhere, and joined ethical approval for all study sites was obtained from the National Institute for Medical Research in Tanzania.

Keywords: mHealth, text message, one-way SMS, cervical cancer, HPV, rapid HPV-test, follow-up, screening, RCT, Tanzania

Suggested Citation

Linde, Ditte and Andersen, Marianne S and Mwaiselage, Julius D. and Manongi, Rachel and Kjaer, Susanne K. and Rasch, Vibeke, One-Way Text Messages versus No Text Messages on Attendance to Follow-Up Cervical Cancer Screening Among HPV-Positive Tanzanian Women (Connected2Care): A Parallel-Group Randomised Controlled Trial (June 17, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3405601 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3405601

Ditte Linde (Contact Author)

University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Clinical Research ( email )

Campusvej 55
DK-5230 Odense, 5000
Denmark

Odense University Hospital - Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology ( email )

Odense
Denmark

University of Southern Denmark - Odense Patient Data Explorative Network (OPEN) ( email )

Denmark

Marianne S Andersen

Odense University Hospital - Department of Endocrinology ( email )

Julius D. Mwaiselage

Ocean Road Cancer Institute ( email )

Dar es Salaam
Tanzania

Rachel Manongi

Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College ( email )

Moshi, Kilimanjaro 251
Tanzania

Susanne K. Kjaer

Government of the Kingdom of Denmark - Rigshospitalet University Hospital ( email )

Denmark

Danish Cancer Society Research Centre - Unit of Virus, Lifestyle and Genes ( email )

Copenhagen
Denmark

Vibeke Rasch

University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Clinical Research ( email )

Campusvej 55
DK-5230 Odense, 5000
Denmark

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