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Cultural and Linguistic Adaptation of a Breast Reconstruction Decision Tool - AIM2

NCT ID: NCT06817226Sponsor: UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer CenterLast updated: 2025-11-25

Summary

Breast reconstruction is a critical component of breast cancer treatment because it restores quality of life and body image after mastectomy. However, Spanish-speaking Latina women are significantly less likely to undergo reconstruction (13.5% vs. 41% for non-Latina White or highly acculturated Latina), meet with a reconstructive surgeon (18.1% vs. 72.6% for non-Latina White), or receive adequate information. Spanish-speaking Latina breast cancer survivors who do not have reconstruction experience the highest rates of decisional dissatisfaction and regret, compared to any other group of breast cancer survivors. Persons diagnosed with cancer who primarily speak Spanish and identify as Latin American (hereafter we use the term "Spanish-speaking Latinx/a cancer survivor") are less likely to receive guideline-concordant treatment and more likely to have poor cancer outcomes. One way to improve guideline-concordant treatment is through shared decision-making and decision support. When a decision is preference-sensitive (the right choice depends on the person's preferences), such as decisions about breast reconstruction after mastectomy, decision aids are effective. Unfortunately, most decision aids in the United States are written in English and developed or tested with few Latinx people. The BREASTChoice decision aid, proven effective in two randomized controlled trials, addresses knowledge gaps in breast cancer survivors. This study focuses on developing a Spanish-language version of BREASTChoice, which was previously unavailable. For that reason, the Cultural and Linguistic Adaptation Framework (CLAF) incorporates qualitative and experiential data to adapt BREASTChoice. The adaptation process takes place in five steps: appraise, review, assess, solicit, and integrate.

Arms & interventions

  • BehavioralPre-survey

    Participants will take a pre-survey to measure demographics, health literacy, numeracy and breast reconstruction decision quality.

  • BehavioralBREASTChoice tool.

    Participants will then engage in a self-guided review of the adapted BREASTChoice tool.

  • BehavioralPost-survey

    Participants will take the post-survey to assess breast reconstruction decision quality.

Outcome measures

Primary

  • Change in breast reconstruction knowledge

    Knowledge will be calculated before and after the intervention. The number of correct answers divided by the total number of knowledge items. Missing items will be counted as incorrect. A knowledge score will be calculated only if at least 50% of the items are answered. Descriptive statistics will be used.

    Time frame: Up to 2 months

Eligibility criteria

Sex: AllAge: 18 Years and olderHealthy volunteers: Yes
Inclusion Criteria for Survivors: (must meet all criteria) * Female sex * Adult at least 18 years of age * Latina, Latino, or Latinx ethnicity - defined as born in or descending from South America, Mexico, Central America, other Spanish-speaking Caribbean islands * Prefer to receive health information in Spanish * Have a history of breast malignancy (e.g., ductal carcinoma, DCIS) or high risk for breast cancer (e.g., BRCA mutation) * Had breast surgery (Mastectomy/Lumpectomy/Mastectomy but no reconstruction) within the last 8 years * Able to understand an IRB-Approved consent information sheet Exclusion Criteria: \-

Study locations (1)

The University of North Carolina

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27599

Recruiting
Meaghan Hazelet · Contact
Clara Lee, MD · Principal Investigator
BREAST Choice Decision Tool R21 - AIM2 | Cancerify