Texas Primary Care Intervention Seeks to Improve Outcomes for Cancer Survivors

Oct. 9, 2024
Project CASCADE will designate care coordinator champions in community health center clinics with the goal of improving tracking of cancer survivors

UTHealth Houston researchers are partnering with eight Texas primary care community health centers on an intervention study seeking to improve outcomes for cancer survivors and enhance primary care capacity.

Funded with a $4.8 million grant from the National Cancer Institute, the Project CASCADE initiative will focus on under- and uninsured patients.

CASCADE stands for Community and Academic Synergy for Cancer Survivorship Care Delivery Enhancement.

The intervention will seek to help community health center clinics improve identification and tracking of cancer survivors by modifying existing clinic workflows and coordinating survivors’ care through a designated care coordinator champion. It will also use Project ECHO – a telementoring strategy to enhance primary care clinicians’ knowledge about cancer survivorship care, recognition and management of the effects of cancer and its treatments, and communication between oncologists and primary care team. 

Researchers expect this intervention to increase rates of guideline-recommended screenings for secondary cancers, primary care clinician knowledge of cancer survivorship care, and patient-reported experience of care coordination. Researchers will also measure adherence to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network surveillance guidelines for survivors with the most prevalent cancer types, such as breast, colorectal, prostate, and lung.

“Project CASCADE focuses on how primary health care teams provide whole-person and coordinated care to underserved patients who have a history of cancer,” said Bijal Balasubramanian, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., professor of epidemiology at UTHealth Houston School of Public Health, in a statement. 

“Primary care is uniquely suited to deliver whole-person and coordinated care for cancer survivors because, at its core, it prioritizes, personalizes, and integrates health care for all conditions, not just the cancer,” added Balasubramanian, Rockwell Distinguished Chair in Society and Health, and a principal investigator of the study.

Balasubramanian, who is also co-director of the UTHealth Houston Institute for Implementation Science and regional dean of the School of Public Health in Dallas, said 70% of cancer survivors have other chronic conditions and receive care from multiple clinical teams, which can create gaps in the coordination of care. Cancer survivors are also at higher risk for developing other cancers and chronic conditions. This, coupled with a growing number of cancer survivors and an anticipated shortage of oncology subspecialists, makes the study even more timely and significant.

Project CASCADE is one of four National Cancer Institute-funded U01 grants awarded in response to a special request for applications focused on addressing the primary care needs of cancer survivors. 

Simon Lee, Ph.D., M.P.H., chair and Sosland Family Professor in Preventive Medicine at the University of Kansas, is a co-principal investigator. Roxana Cruz, M.D., chief innovation officer for the Texas Association of Community Health Centers, will be an advisor for the study.

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