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ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT07283107
NA

Trial to Evaluate the Impact of Various Behavioural Interventions to Increase Mammography Uptake Among Singaporean Women

Sponsor: National University Hospital, Singapore

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Breast cancer is the leading cancer among women in Singapore, yet mammography screening rates remain critically low at 34.7%, despite the availability of a national program since 2002. This shortfall significantly limits the potential of screening to reduce mortality at a population level. While various behavioral interventions have been tested internationally to increase uptake, their applicability in the local context remains uncertain. Existing studies in Singapore are either outdated, small in scale, or not sufficiently targeted. In particular, two subgroups of women warrant closer examination due to the scarcity of data: (1) never-screeners: those who have never undergone a mammogram and (3) recent screeners: those who had a mammogram more than two years ago but have not scheduled their next one. These cohorts exhibit distinct behavioral and psychological barriers that prevent adherence to regular, guideline-recommended screening. E.g., key barriers for never- screeners include low perceived susceptibility to breast cancer, lack of awareness about the benefits of early detection, fear or anxiety about pain or receiving a cancer diagnosis, cultural or personal modesty concerns or lack of a physician's recommendation. In contrast, the repeat recent screeners often have a misconception that a single normal result is sufficient, negative experiences during prior screenings (e.g., false positives, pain), absence of reminder systems and competing life priorities and lack of time. Among these, engaging never-screeners is particularly challenging, as they may not perceive screening as personally relevant or necessary, and many have successfully avoided the healthcare system for years. Yet, failure to engage these groups; poses a significant public health concern, as it undermines the effectiveness of population-level cancer control strategies. The PROMPT study is designed to fill this critical gap by systematically evaluating multiple low-cost, scalable outreach strategies in two parallel randomized trials. Its findings will provide robust, local evidence to inform policy and improve engagement of these hard-to-reach populations.

Official title: Two Parallel Randomized Controlled Trials to Evaluate Outreach Strategies for Increasing Mammogram Uptake in Women Who Have Never Screened or Are Due for Repeat Screening

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

50 Years - 69 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

8910

Start Date

2025-11-17

Completion Date

2027-12-31

Last Updated

2025-12-29

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Arm 2: One mailed reminder

Receives a mailed reminder with basic information about breast cancer and instructions on scheduling a mammogram

BEHAVIORAL

Arm 3: Two mailed reminders

Receives a mailed reminder + follow-up mailed reminder, 1 month after the first reminder

BEHAVIORAL

Arm 4: Mailed reminder with prescheduled appointment

Receives one mailed reminder with a pre-scheduled appointment, with instructions to change appointment

BEHAVIORAL

Arm 5: Mailed reminder with enhanced messaging

Receives one mailed reminder with enhanced messaging motivating recipient to undergo screening

Locations (1)

National University Hospital Singapore

Singapore, Singapore