Improving early detection and diagnosis of breast cancer among multi-ethnic rural communities in Malaysia - implementation of the CENP

Lead Research Organisation: Queen's University Belfast
Department Name: Centre for Public Health

Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) is the commonest cancer in Malaysia. Women in rural areas present with advanced cancer and experience poor survival due to low awareness about symptoms and low participation in BC screening. This project aims to harness the lessons from our previous successful study in Malaysia and the methods of implementation science to develop and evaluate a community education and navigation programme (CENP) that will improve the early detection and diagnosis of BC among rural women. The study will be conducted in Segamat district, Johor State in consultation with local stakeholders and with the support of the South East Asia Community Observatory (SEACO), an established Health & Demographic Surveillance Site. The immediate beneficiaries will be women and families in local rural communities in Malaysia. Our project will benefit rural communities by increasing public awareness about warning signs and symptoms and, more specifically, by navigating women to breast cancer screening. The CENP will identify and counter emotional barriers, dispel misbeliefs and prompt help-seeking behaviour thereby enhancing cancer prevention and leading, where appropriate, to early diagnosis and
treatment. Our project via improved prevention and earlier diagnosis will reduce the burden including the personal, financial and psychosocial burden that is experienced by many women and their families as well as the resource burden to the health care system and the wider societal economic consequences for Malaysia. In addition, our project will collaborate with primary care physicians in order to improve their understanding further about the community in which they serve, embed patient navigation in community and primary care services and expedite referral of suspected cases. Furthermore, the project will capacity build' to the benefit of rural communities, NGOs, public health researchers and academics by enhancing knowledge and educational materials and related skills regarding cancer.

Technical Summary

Phase 1 will involve conducting an evidence synthesis of studies about community navigation programmes. The views of community advocates and stakeholder groups will be elicited via focus groups with women from different socioeconomic backgrounds and ethnic groups in rural areas of Segamat and individual interviews with key informants. Phase 2 will involve co-designing a culturally sensitive CENP, the selection of navigators and the development of training modules and health education materials. Phase 3 will test the appropriateness and acceptability of the new programme via FGs. Phase 4 will conduct a comparative evaluation in Segamat district which has 11 sub-districts, 5 of which provide data for the SEACO platform. The 5 sub-districts are approximately similar in terms of socio-demographic profile and health service profile. One intervention sub-district and two comparator sub-districts will be chosen randomly from the 5 rural sub-districts. SEACO completes an annual enumeration and multiple population-wide health surveys in these sub-districts. A sample of 466 at the 'intervention sub-district' and 466 at each 'comparator sub-district' will be drawn randomly from SEACO data to participate in the evaluation. A sample size of 1400 will allow 80% power to detect, as statistically significant at the 5% level, an increase of 8% or more in the proportion
aware of a breast cancer symptom in the CENP site compared with comparator sites after the intervention (based upon baseline awareness of a breast lump as a cancer symptom of 65% from our previous Newton-funded study). The sample size of 1400 will also allow 80% power to detect an absolute increase in the proportion of women who visit a doctor in the 6 months following CENP of 8% in the CENP site compared with comparator sites. Phase 5 activities will involve dissemination and writing joined-up policy and practice briefs for the Ministry of Rural Development and the Ministry of Health.

Publications

10 25 50
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Elshahat S (2021) Factors influencing physical activity participation among people living with or beyond cancer: a systematic scoping review. in The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity

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Htay M (2021) Validation of the Champion Health Belief Model Scale for an Investigation of Breast Cancer Screening Behaviour in Malaysia in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

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Htay MNN (2021) Breast Cancer Screening in Malaysia: A Policy Review. in Asian Pacific journal of cancer prevention : APJCP

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Htay MNN (2022) Changing Health Beliefs about Breast Cancer Screening among Women in Multi-Ethnic Malaysia. in International journal of environmental research and public health

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Htay MNN (2022) Women's health beliefs and uptake of breast cancer screening in Malaysia. in European journal of cancer care

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Mohan D (2021) Breast Cancer Screening in Semi-Rural Malaysia: Utilisation and Barriers. in International journal of environmental research and public health

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Murphy B (2021) Patient's perspectives of living with a precancerous condition: Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS). in European journal of oncology nursing : the official journal of European Oncology Nursing Society

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Ngan TT (2022) Health-related quality of life among breast cancer patients compared to cancer survivors and age-matched women in the general population in Vietnam. in Quality of life research : an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation

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Ngan TT (2021) Financial toxicity due to breast cancer treatment in low- and middle-income countries: evidence from Vietnam. in Supportive care in cancer : official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer

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Su TT (2022) Improving breast and colorectal cancer screening uptake in Malaysia. in European journal of cancer care

 
Description The development and evaluation of a mHealth, community education and navigation intervention to improve clinical breast examination uptake in Segamat Malaysia

Breast cancer (BC) screening uptake in Malaysia is low and a high number of cases present at a late stage. Community navigation and mobile health (mHealth) may increase screening attendance, particularly by women from rural communities. This randomized controlled study evaluated an intervention that used mHealth and community health workers to educate women about BC screening and navigate them to clinical breast examination (CBE) services in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Women aged 40-74 years, from Segamat, Malaysia, with a mobile phone number, who participated in the South East Asian Community Observatory health survey, (2018) were randomized to an intervention (IG) or comparison group (CG). The IG received a multi-component mHealth intervention, i.e. information about BC was provided through a website, and telephone calls and text messages from community health workers (CHWs) were used to raise BC awareness and navigate women to CBE services. The CG received no intervention other than the usual option to access opportunistic screening. Regression analyses were conducted to investigate between-group differences over time in uptake of screening and variable influences on CBE screening participation.
We recruited 483 women in total; 122/225 from the IG and 144/258 from the CG completed the baseline and follow-up survey. Uptake of CBE by the IG was 45.8% (103/225) whilst 3.5% (5/144) of women from the CG who completed the follow-up survey reported that they attended a CBE during the study period (adjusted OR 37.21, 95% CI 14.13; 98.00, p<0.001). All IG women with a positive CBE attended a follow-up mammogram (11/11). Attendance by IG women was lower among women with a household income =RM 4,850 (adjusted OR 0.48, 95% CI 0.20; 0.95, p=0.038) compared to participants with a household income
Exploitation Route Several papers have been published and the final outcomes paper is under review. Overall, and bearing in mind the study limitations, the results of this study suggest that the use of a multicomponent community education and navigation intervention or programme has considerable potential to elicit positive health protective intentions and improve clinical breast examination uptake in Segamat Malaysia even in the highly challenging circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic. The results point to ways in which the intervention might be improved as well as the need for further research to test how well the intervention works in a non-pandemic context and how its generalisability might be addressed and extended.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Healthcare

 
Description A study of the implementation of population-based bowel cancer screening in Malaysia
Amount £202,396 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/S014349/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2018 
End 11/2020
 
Description Queen's University Belfast-Monash University Malaysia Collaboration 
Organisation Monash University Malaysia
Country Malaysia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I collaborated with Professor Tin Tin Su when she was Head of the Centre for Population Health at University Malaya and then continued this collaboration with her when she moved to Monash University, Malaysia. This is our third collaborative public health cancer care study. The start of this project was delayed because it was not possible to appoint a post-doctoral research fellow with the appropriate mix of knowledge, experience and skills until approximately 5 months after the original start date. Both the colorectal cancer screening implementation study and the breast cancer screening study (in Malaysia) have been delayed due to the COVID pandemic. We are making progress on each project but progress is slower that set out in the respective project planning timetables.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Tin Tin Su, the field research team at the SEACO Observatory in Malaysia, the QUB Research Fellow and me met with the lead medical staff in the health centres, the hospital colorectal surgeon and lead nurse manager in Segamat, Malaysia to discuss the project and build good working relationships. The research project team have completed qualitative interviews with key informants and focus groups with community representatives and local residents as well as conducting a scoping review of relevant literature regarding relevant interventions. This evidence base will be used to inform the initial development of the intervention that will be tested iteratively and then evaluated.
Impact Please see relevant sections for list of outputs and outcomes. The assembled evidence will be used to inform the development of the intervention that will be tested iteratively and then evaluated. http://www.becanceralert.com/bm/ - this is the website that was developed as part of the first grant-funded study (the PACED Study). The site will be developed further in relation to the second and third grant funded study on colorectal and breast cancer screening respectively.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Queen's University Belfast-Monash University Malaysia Collaboration 
Organisation Queen's University Belfast
Department Centre for Public Health (CPH)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I collaborated with Professor Tin Tin Su when she was Head of the Centre for Population Health at University Malaya and then continued this collaboration with her when she moved to Monash University, Malaysia. This is our third collaborative public health cancer care study. The start of this project was delayed because it was not possible to appoint a post-doctoral research fellow with the appropriate mix of knowledge, experience and skills until approximately 5 months after the original start date. Both the colorectal cancer screening implementation study and the breast cancer screening study (in Malaysia) have been delayed due to the COVID pandemic. We are making progress on each project but progress is slower that set out in the respective project planning timetables.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Tin Tin Su, the field research team at the SEACO Observatory in Malaysia, the QUB Research Fellow and me met with the lead medical staff in the health centres, the hospital colorectal surgeon and lead nurse manager in Segamat, Malaysia to discuss the project and build good working relationships. The research project team have completed qualitative interviews with key informants and focus groups with community representatives and local residents as well as conducting a scoping review of relevant literature regarding relevant interventions. This evidence base will be used to inform the initial development of the intervention that will be tested iteratively and then evaluated.
Impact Please see relevant sections for list of outputs and outcomes. The assembled evidence will be used to inform the development of the intervention that will be tested iteratively and then evaluated. http://www.becanceralert.com/bm/ - this is the website that was developed as part of the first grant-funded study (the PACED Study). The site will be developed further in relation to the second and third grant funded study on colorectal and breast cancer screening respectively.
Start Year 2015
 
Description The PACED Initiative in Malaysia 
Organisation Ministry of Health Malaysia
Country Malaysia 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Early on in the project, the study team, comprising researchers from the University of Malaya and Queen's University Belfast, developed collaborative working relationships with the National Cancer Society Malaysia and the Ministry of Health Malaysia and the NI Public Health Agency.
Collaborator Contribution The UM-QUB team met with the personnel from the Northern Ireland (NI) Government Department of Health's Public Health Agency (PHA) who are responsible for the Be Cancer Aware Programme (BeCAP) in NI. We have developed good working relationships with the PHA BeCAP staff and Dr Schliemann provides regular updates to the PHA about the PACED Project. In particular, the PHA shared all BeCAP media materials and content with the PACED team as well as reports, evaluation tools and experiences about running the mass media campaign in Northern Ireland. The National Cancer Society and the Ministry of Health worked collaboratively with the UM-QUB team on all aspects of the design and delivery of the public health cancer campaign.
Impact The public health cancer awareness campaign comprised: ? Television (TV3, TV9 and 8TV) - these channels were chosen as they are channels with a large viewership and target two major ethnic groups (Malay and Chinese). A 15-30-second TV commercial will be produced including three cancer survivors (1 female Malay, 1 male Chinese, 1 male Indian). ? Radio (Raaga and Lite FM) - These stations were chosen as they are stations with large listenership. Raaga is a Tamil station that has been chosen to reach the Indian population. Lite FM is an English station, targeted at people aged 40 years and older. Therefore, Lite FM reaches people from all ethnicities. A 30-second radio advert was produced in Tamil and English. ? Print advertisement - Based on evaluation results from BeCAP, placement of posters in doctor's clinics was the second most common medium which people noticed (after TV). Therefore, we distributed posters throughout public and private clinics in the study area. Local doctors distributed our posters as well as brochures in their clinics. In addition, posters were distributed in Mosques and local shops. Buntings were distributed throughout the study area. Furthermore, advertisements were placed throughout the University of Malaya Campus (bunting and LED screens) to promote awareness amongst University staff and students. The PACED team decided against newspaper advertisement due to budget constraints and feedback from the focus group discussions, which highlighted that few people read newspapers and magazines. ? Internet - The website domain becanceralert.com was purchased and set up by the PACED team. The website was used to provide further information about colorectal and breast cancer. Social media experts were hired to create professional content and analyse feedback on social media, mainly Facebook. The National Cancer Society Facebook account was used to post all campaign related materials, so that we were able to reach a larger number of people through social media than if we were to set up a new account. The Colorectal Cancer (CRC) campaign took place in April. The campaign ran from the 2nd of April until the 6th of May 2018 (5 weeks) and the campaign launch was held on the 5th of April. The Breast Cancer (BC) Campaign was run during Breast Cancer Awareness month from 24th September until 28th October (5 weeks).
Start Year 2017
 
Description The PACED Initiative in Malaysia 
Organisation National Cancer Registry (Malaysia)
Country Malaysia 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution Early on in the project, the study team, comprising researchers from the University of Malaya and Queen's University Belfast, developed collaborative working relationships with the National Cancer Society Malaysia and the Ministry of Health Malaysia and the NI Public Health Agency.
Collaborator Contribution The UM-QUB team met with the personnel from the Northern Ireland (NI) Government Department of Health's Public Health Agency (PHA) who are responsible for the Be Cancer Aware Programme (BeCAP) in NI. We have developed good working relationships with the PHA BeCAP staff and Dr Schliemann provides regular updates to the PHA about the PACED Project. In particular, the PHA shared all BeCAP media materials and content with the PACED team as well as reports, evaluation tools and experiences about running the mass media campaign in Northern Ireland. The National Cancer Society and the Ministry of Health worked collaboratively with the UM-QUB team on all aspects of the design and delivery of the public health cancer campaign.
Impact The public health cancer awareness campaign comprised: ? Television (TV3, TV9 and 8TV) - these channels were chosen as they are channels with a large viewership and target two major ethnic groups (Malay and Chinese). A 15-30-second TV commercial will be produced including three cancer survivors (1 female Malay, 1 male Chinese, 1 male Indian). ? Radio (Raaga and Lite FM) - These stations were chosen as they are stations with large listenership. Raaga is a Tamil station that has been chosen to reach the Indian population. Lite FM is an English station, targeted at people aged 40 years and older. Therefore, Lite FM reaches people from all ethnicities. A 30-second radio advert was produced in Tamil and English. ? Print advertisement - Based on evaluation results from BeCAP, placement of posters in doctor's clinics was the second most common medium which people noticed (after TV). Therefore, we distributed posters throughout public and private clinics in the study area. Local doctors distributed our posters as well as brochures in their clinics. In addition, posters were distributed in Mosques and local shops. Buntings were distributed throughout the study area. Furthermore, advertisements were placed throughout the University of Malaya Campus (bunting and LED screens) to promote awareness amongst University staff and students. The PACED team decided against newspaper advertisement due to budget constraints and feedback from the focus group discussions, which highlighted that few people read newspapers and magazines. ? Internet - The website domain becanceralert.com was purchased and set up by the PACED team. The website was used to provide further information about colorectal and breast cancer. Social media experts were hired to create professional content and analyse feedback on social media, mainly Facebook. The National Cancer Society Facebook account was used to post all campaign related materials, so that we were able to reach a larger number of people through social media than if we were to set up a new account. The Colorectal Cancer (CRC) campaign took place in April. The campaign ran from the 2nd of April until the 6th of May 2018 (5 weeks) and the campaign launch was held on the 5th of April. The Breast Cancer (BC) Campaign was run during Breast Cancer Awareness month from 24th September until 28th October (5 weeks).
Start Year 2017
 
Description The PACED Initiative in Malaysia 
Organisation Public Health Agency (PHA)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Early on in the project, the study team, comprising researchers from the University of Malaya and Queen's University Belfast, developed collaborative working relationships with the National Cancer Society Malaysia and the Ministry of Health Malaysia and the NI Public Health Agency.
Collaborator Contribution The UM-QUB team met with the personnel from the Northern Ireland (NI) Government Department of Health's Public Health Agency (PHA) who are responsible for the Be Cancer Aware Programme (BeCAP) in NI. We have developed good working relationships with the PHA BeCAP staff and Dr Schliemann provides regular updates to the PHA about the PACED Project. In particular, the PHA shared all BeCAP media materials and content with the PACED team as well as reports, evaluation tools and experiences about running the mass media campaign in Northern Ireland. The National Cancer Society and the Ministry of Health worked collaboratively with the UM-QUB team on all aspects of the design and delivery of the public health cancer campaign.
Impact The public health cancer awareness campaign comprised: ? Television (TV3, TV9 and 8TV) - these channels were chosen as they are channels with a large viewership and target two major ethnic groups (Malay and Chinese). A 15-30-second TV commercial will be produced including three cancer survivors (1 female Malay, 1 male Chinese, 1 male Indian). ? Radio (Raaga and Lite FM) - These stations were chosen as they are stations with large listenership. Raaga is a Tamil station that has been chosen to reach the Indian population. Lite FM is an English station, targeted at people aged 40 years and older. Therefore, Lite FM reaches people from all ethnicities. A 30-second radio advert was produced in Tamil and English. ? Print advertisement - Based on evaluation results from BeCAP, placement of posters in doctor's clinics was the second most common medium which people noticed (after TV). Therefore, we distributed posters throughout public and private clinics in the study area. Local doctors distributed our posters as well as brochures in their clinics. In addition, posters were distributed in Mosques and local shops. Buntings were distributed throughout the study area. Furthermore, advertisements were placed throughout the University of Malaya Campus (bunting and LED screens) to promote awareness amongst University staff and students. The PACED team decided against newspaper advertisement due to budget constraints and feedback from the focus group discussions, which highlighted that few people read newspapers and magazines. ? Internet - The website domain becanceralert.com was purchased and set up by the PACED team. The website was used to provide further information about colorectal and breast cancer. Social media experts were hired to create professional content and analyse feedback on social media, mainly Facebook. The National Cancer Society Facebook account was used to post all campaign related materials, so that we were able to reach a larger number of people through social media than if we were to set up a new account. The Colorectal Cancer (CRC) campaign took place in April. The campaign ran from the 2nd of April until the 6th of May 2018 (5 weeks) and the campaign launch was held on the 5th of April. The Breast Cancer (BC) Campaign was run during Breast Cancer Awareness month from 24th September until 28th October (5 weeks).
Start Year 2017
 
Description Tripartite Collaboration - Malaysia 
Organisation Melaka Manipal Medical College
Country Malaysia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collaborative design of rapid review and pilot studies.
Collaborator Contribution Collaborative supervision of research assistant to conduct pump-riming research and writing up of protocol and papers.
Impact It is very early days to report outcomes. However, a protocol for a rapid review was registered with PROSPERO: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=391832
Start Year 2022
 
Description Tripartite Collaboration - Malaysia 
Organisation Monash University Malaysia
Country Malaysia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collaborative design of rapid review and pilot studies.
Collaborator Contribution Collaborative supervision of research assistant to conduct pump-riming research and writing up of protocol and papers.
Impact It is very early days to report outcomes. However, a protocol for a rapid review was registered with PROSPERO: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=391832
Start Year 2022