Abstract

BackgroundX-ray mammography remains the predominant test for screening for breast cancer, with the aim of reducing breast cancer mortality. In the English NHS Breast Screening Programme each woman’s mammograms are examined separately by two expert readers. The two readers read each batch in the same order and each indicates if there should be recall for further tests. This is a highly skilled, pressurised, repetitive and frequently intellectually unchallenging activity where readers examine one or more batches of 30–50 women’s mammograms in each session. A vigilance decrement or performance decrease over time has been observed in similar repetitive visual tasks such as radar operation.Methods/DesignThe CO-OPS study is a pragmatic, multi-centre, two-arm, double blind cluster randomised controlled trial of a computer software intervention designed to reduce the effects of a vigilance decrement in breast cancer screening. The unit of randomisation is the batch. Intervention batches will be examined in the opposite order by the two readers (one forwards, one backwards). Control batches will be read in the same order as one another, as is current standard practice. The hypothesis is that cancer detection rates will be higher in the intervention group because each readers’ peak performance will occur when examining different women’s mammograms. The trial will take place in 44 English breast screening centres for 1 year and 4 months. The primary outcome is cancer detection rate, which will be extracted from computer records after 1 year of the trial. The secondary outcomes include rate of disagreement between readers (a more statistically powerful surrogate for cancer detection rate), recall rate, positive predictive value, and interval cancer rate (cancers found between screening rounds which will be measured three years after the end of the trial).DiscussionThis is the first trial of an intervention to ameliorate a vigilance decrement in breast cancer screening.Trial registrationISRCTN46603370 (submitted: 24 October 2012, date of registration: 26 March 2013).

Highlights

  • X-ray mammography remains the predominant test for screening for breast cancer, with the aim of reducing breast cancer mortality

  • This is the first trial of an intervention to ameliorate a vigilance decrement in breast cancer screening

  • Formal approval was granted by the Research and Development office of each National Health Service (NHS) Trust involved in the study

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Summary

Discussion

The experimental design is between subjects, so readers will not be burdened with reading cases twice (once in each experimental condition). Trial status The trial has National Health Service ethical approval, and the software has been activated in 45 centres in the United Kingdom. Authors’ contributions SP conceived the study, secured the funding, led the design process and drafted the paper. MW, SS and AC contributed to securing the funding and to designing and implementing the study. HC contributed to study design and implementation, specialising in its health economics elements. AS, JD and SG contributed to study design. All authors helped redraft the manuscript and read and approved the final version for publication

Background
Findings
Medical Research Council
Full Text
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