Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The GRAIDS trial
View graph of relations

The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care. / Emery, Jon; Morris, Helen; Goodchild, Rebecca et al.
In: British Journal of Cancer, Vol. 97, No. 4, 08.2007, p. 486-493.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Emery, J, Morris, H, Goodchild, R, Fanshawe, T, Prevost, T, Bobrow, M & Kinmonth, A-L 2007, 'The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care', British Journal of Cancer, vol. 97, no. 4, pp. 486-493. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897

APA

Emery, J., Morris, H., Goodchild, R., Fanshawe, T., Prevost, T., Bobrow, M., & Kinmonth, A-L. (2007). The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care. British Journal of Cancer, 97(4), 486-493. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897

Vancouver

Emery J, Morris H, Goodchild R, Fanshawe T, Prevost T, Bobrow M et al. The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care. British Journal of Cancer. 2007 Aug;97(4):486-493. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897

Author

Emery, Jon ; Morris, Helen ; Goodchild, Rebecca et al. / The GRAIDS trial : a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care. In: British Journal of Cancer. 2007 ; Vol. 97, No. 4. pp. 486-493.

Bibtex

@article{03ed1f9d877943c297eb94de48a11907,
title = "The GRAIDS trial: a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care",
abstract = "The objective was to evaluate the effect of an assessment strategy using the computer decision support system (the GRAIDS software), on the management of familial cancer risk in British general practice in comparison with best current practice. The design included cluster randomised controlled trial, and involved forty-five general practice teams in East Anglia, UK. Randomised to GRAIDS (Genetic Risk Assessment on the Internet with Decision Support) support (intervention n=23) or comparison (n=22). Training in the new assessment strategy and access to the GRAIDS software (GRAIDS arm) was conducted, compared with an educational session and guidelines about managing familial breast and colorectal cancer risk (comparison) were mailed. Outcomes were measured at practice, practitioner and patient levels. The primary outcome measure, at practice level, was the proportion of referrals made to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial breast or colorectal cancer that were consistent with referral guidelines. Other measures included practitioner confidence in managing familial cancer (GRAIDS arm only) and, in patients: cancer worry, risk perception and knowledge about familial cancer. There were more referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic from GRAIDS than comparison practices (mean 6.2 and 3.2 referrals per 10 000 registered patients per year; mean difference 3.0 referrals; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2–4.8; P=0.001); referrals from GRAIDS practices were more likely to be consistent with referral guidelines (odds ratio (OR)=5.2; 95% CI 1.7–15.8, P=0.006). Patients referred from GRAIDS practices had lower cancer worry scores at the point of referral (mean difference -1.44 95% CI -2.64 to -0.23, P=0.02). There were no differences in patient knowledge about familial cancer. The intervention increased GPs' confidence in managing familial cancer. Compared with education and mailed guidelines, assessment including computer decision support increased the number and quality of referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial cancer risk, improved practitioner confidence and had no adverse psychological effects in patients. Trials are registered under N0181144343 in the UK National Research Register.",
keywords = "primary health care , clinical decision support systems , neoplastic syndromes , hereditary , randomised controlled trials",
author = "Jon Emery and Helen Morris and Rebecca Goodchild and Thomas Fanshawe and Toby Prevost and Martin Bobrow and Ann-Louise Kinmonth",
year = "2007",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897",
language = "English",
volume = "97",
pages = "486--493",
journal = "British Journal of Cancer",
issn = "1532-1827",
publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The GRAIDS trial

T2 - a cluster randomised controlled trial of computer decision support for the management of familial cancer risk in primary care

AU - Emery, Jon

AU - Morris, Helen

AU - Goodchild, Rebecca

AU - Fanshawe, Thomas

AU - Prevost, Toby

AU - Bobrow, Martin

AU - Kinmonth, Ann-Louise

PY - 2007/8

Y1 - 2007/8

N2 - The objective was to evaluate the effect of an assessment strategy using the computer decision support system (the GRAIDS software), on the management of familial cancer risk in British general practice in comparison with best current practice. The design included cluster randomised controlled trial, and involved forty-five general practice teams in East Anglia, UK. Randomised to GRAIDS (Genetic Risk Assessment on the Internet with Decision Support) support (intervention n=23) or comparison (n=22). Training in the new assessment strategy and access to the GRAIDS software (GRAIDS arm) was conducted, compared with an educational session and guidelines about managing familial breast and colorectal cancer risk (comparison) were mailed. Outcomes were measured at practice, practitioner and patient levels. The primary outcome measure, at practice level, was the proportion of referrals made to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial breast or colorectal cancer that were consistent with referral guidelines. Other measures included practitioner confidence in managing familial cancer (GRAIDS arm only) and, in patients: cancer worry, risk perception and knowledge about familial cancer. There were more referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic from GRAIDS than comparison practices (mean 6.2 and 3.2 referrals per 10 000 registered patients per year; mean difference 3.0 referrals; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2–4.8; P=0.001); referrals from GRAIDS practices were more likely to be consistent with referral guidelines (odds ratio (OR)=5.2; 95% CI 1.7–15.8, P=0.006). Patients referred from GRAIDS practices had lower cancer worry scores at the point of referral (mean difference -1.44 95% CI -2.64 to -0.23, P=0.02). There were no differences in patient knowledge about familial cancer. The intervention increased GPs' confidence in managing familial cancer. Compared with education and mailed guidelines, assessment including computer decision support increased the number and quality of referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial cancer risk, improved practitioner confidence and had no adverse psychological effects in patients. Trials are registered under N0181144343 in the UK National Research Register.

AB - The objective was to evaluate the effect of an assessment strategy using the computer decision support system (the GRAIDS software), on the management of familial cancer risk in British general practice in comparison with best current practice. The design included cluster randomised controlled trial, and involved forty-five general practice teams in East Anglia, UK. Randomised to GRAIDS (Genetic Risk Assessment on the Internet with Decision Support) support (intervention n=23) or comparison (n=22). Training in the new assessment strategy and access to the GRAIDS software (GRAIDS arm) was conducted, compared with an educational session and guidelines about managing familial breast and colorectal cancer risk (comparison) were mailed. Outcomes were measured at practice, practitioner and patient levels. The primary outcome measure, at practice level, was the proportion of referrals made to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial breast or colorectal cancer that were consistent with referral guidelines. Other measures included practitioner confidence in managing familial cancer (GRAIDS arm only) and, in patients: cancer worry, risk perception and knowledge about familial cancer. There were more referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic from GRAIDS than comparison practices (mean 6.2 and 3.2 referrals per 10 000 registered patients per year; mean difference 3.0 referrals; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2–4.8; P=0.001); referrals from GRAIDS practices were more likely to be consistent with referral guidelines (odds ratio (OR)=5.2; 95% CI 1.7–15.8, P=0.006). Patients referred from GRAIDS practices had lower cancer worry scores at the point of referral (mean difference -1.44 95% CI -2.64 to -0.23, P=0.02). There were no differences in patient knowledge about familial cancer. The intervention increased GPs' confidence in managing familial cancer. Compared with education and mailed guidelines, assessment including computer decision support increased the number and quality of referrals to the Regional Genetics Clinic for familial cancer risk, improved practitioner confidence and had no adverse psychological effects in patients. Trials are registered under N0181144343 in the UK National Research Register.

KW - primary health care

KW - clinical decision support systems

KW - neoplastic syndromes

KW - hereditary

KW - randomised controlled trials

U2 - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897

DO - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603897

M3 - Journal article

VL - 97

SP - 486

EP - 493

JO - British Journal of Cancer

JF - British Journal of Cancer

SN - 1532-1827

IS - 4

ER -