Screening To Overcome and Prevent Colorectal Cancer (STOP CRC)

A Culturally Adapted Decision Support Navigation Trial for Chinese and Korean American Primary Care Patients

Project Background

Colorectal cancer incidence and mortality continues to be high among Chinese and Korean populations in the U.S. There have been improvements over time, but the colorectal cancer screening rate remains substantially lower among Chinese and Korean Americans in comparison to other racial and ethnic groups. This is a serious concern considering that screening can reduce deaths from colorectal cancer and can help save lives through early detection when it is the most treatable. 

Project Description

In order to overcome unique linguistic and cultural barriers to colorectal cancer screening, Professor Sunmin Lee and her research team have developed a culturally adapted colorectal cancer screening program that aids decision-making among Chinese and Korean patients in the primary care setting.

Target Population

The recommended screening age for colorectal cancer is between age 50 and 75. Our study targets Chinese and Korean patients between age 50 and 75 who are not up to date for their screenings.

Project Aims

The goal of this study is to increase colorectal cancer screening among Chinese and Korean American primary care patients through culturally adapted decision support trial provided at the primary care setting.

  1. Implement a randomized controlled trial intervention among 400 Chinese and Korean American primary care patients to compare colorectal cancer screening outcomes between the culturally adapted decision support intervention and advanced control.
  2. Evaluate the effect of the intervention on overall colorectal screening adherence, change in colorectal cancer screening decision stage and colorectal cancer screening test-specific (stool blood test and colonoscopy) adherence among participants.
  3. Evaluate intervention reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance. 

Project Funding

This project is funded by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (R01MD012778), National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Co-Investigators

Roshan Bastani
Professor, Department of Health Policy and Management
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

Brittany N. Morey, PhD, MPH
Assistant Professor, Program in Public Health
University of California, Irvine

Natalie Slopen, Sc.D
Assistant Professor
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Ronald E. Myers, DSW, PhD
Director, Department of Medical Oncology
Division of Population Science, Thomas Jefferson University

Min Qi Wang, PhD, MS
Professor, Behavior and Community Health
School of Public Health, University of Maryland

Primary Care Physicians Involved in Study

Community Advisory Board Members

Perry Chan, MS, CHES
Program Manager
Asian American Health Initiative, Montgomery County, Maryland Department of Health and Human Services

Dr. Ji-Young Cho
Executive Director
Korean Community Service Center of Greater Washington
Elizabeth Chung
Executive Director
Asian American Center of Frederick
Mei Du
Office Manager
Asian American Health Center
Dr. Joyce M. Koh
Gastroenterologist
Montgomery Gastroenterology
Dr. Oki Kwon
Internal Medicine Specialist
Meng K. Lee
Vice Chair
Asia American Health Initiative, Steering Committee
Kate Lu
Director
Pan Asian Volunteer Health Clinic, Chinese Culture and Community Service Center (CCACC)

If you are interested in additional information regarding our STOP CRC project,
please email our research assistant, Grace Lee, at grace.lee@uci.edu.