This is a developing list of current projects that the Primary Care Unit is running or collaborating in. To submit a new project, please use this form [STAFF ONLY]
Older or completed projects are not available for view at this time.
Title: | REducing and preventing COgnitive impairment iN older age groups |
Project abbreviation | The RECON Programme |
Project Description: | To develop and test efficient internet-supported healthy behaviour/cognitive exercises to reduce cognitive decline among older age adults. |
Project organisation | |
Start date: | 1st January 2017 |
End date: | 31st January 2027 |
Contact person: | Professor Simon Griffin |
Contact Details: | Primary Care Unit Institute of Public Health University Forvie Site, Robinson Way Cambridge Cambs CB2 0SR UK Telephone: (01223) 330307 Fax: 01223 762515 E-mail: profgp@medschl.cam.ac.uk |
Collaborative: | Prof Paul Little (Lead) Yardley L Ballard Griffin S Griffiths G Kendrick A Mutrie N Rathod S Robinson L Rossor M Stuart B Yao GL |
Further Information, References and Publications | |
Website : https://www.southampton.ac.uk/medicine/academic_units/projects/recon.page#project_overview |
Title: | A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Study |
Project Description: | Aim To assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of home-based cardiac rehabilitation programme ‘REACH-HF’ plus usual care (intervention) versus usual care alone (control) in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) patients and their caregivers.Methods Design: Multicentre parallel two group randomised (1:1 patient allocation) superiority trial with nested process and health economic evaluations and an internal pilot phase.Participants: 520 patients with HFpEF and their caregivers.
Setting: 15 sites across England, Scotland, and Wales. Intervention: REACH-HF is a comprehensive home-based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) and self-management programme informed by evidence, theory and service user perspective. It comprises the ‘Heart Failure Manual’, a Relaxation CD, a choice of exercise (walking programme or a chair-based exercise DVD), a ‘Progress Tracker’ tool for patients, and a ‘Family and Friends Resource’ for caregivers. Participating patients and caregivers work through the manual over a 12-week period with facilitation by a trained healthcare professional (e.g. heart failure-specialist nurse or rehabilitation physiotherapist) using both face-to-face support and telephone support. Control: both intervention and control patients will receive usual medical care. Primary outcome: Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire score at 12-months.Secondary outcomes: deaths and hospital admissions; blood-borne biomarker; exercise capacity; physical activity levels; psychological well-being; generic quality of life; frailty; selfcare; self-efficacy. Caregivers: burden, generic quality of life, psychological well-being; Collected at baseline (pre-randomisation), and 4 and 12-month post-randomisation. Data analysis Economic evaluation: With-in trial cost-utility analysis over the 12-months. Process evaluation: Case-based mixed methods analysis. Timetable Expertise Impact |
Project organisation | |
Start date: | 1st March 2021 |
End date: | 31th August 2025 |
Contact person: | Professor Christi Deaton |
Contact Details: | Primary Care Unit East Forvie Building Robinson Way Cambridge CB2 0SR UK E-mail: cd513@medschl.cam.ac.uk |
Funding information | |
Funding Organisation: | National Institute for Health Research |
Funding Amount: | £2,195,202 |
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: |
AI-Skin – Understanding and implementing artificial intelligence technologies to improve skin cancer assessment in primary care settings |
Project Description: | Skin cancer, including melanoma and the keratocytic carcinomas (basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), previously known as non-melanoma skin cancers), has one of the highest global incidences of any form of cancer. In the UK in 2016 more than 16,000 people were diagnosed with the deadliest skin cancer, melanoma (Cancer Research UK). Over the last decade the incidence of melanoma has increased by 50% in the UK, and about one in ten melanomas are diagnosed at a late stage. Among the keratinocytic carcinomas, BCC is the most common cancer amongst Caucasian populations.
Primary care clinicians have a vital role to play in detecting and managing patients with skin lesions suspected to be skin cancer, as timely diagnosis and treatment can improve patient outcomes, particularly for melanoma. However, detecting skin cancer can be challenging, as common non-malignant skin lesions share features with less common skin cancers. In recent years there has been huge interest in the application of artificial intelligence (AI) to medical diagnosis in general. One key area is cancer detection and diagnosis, and emerging AI technologies and diagnostic aids may soon become available for use in primary care and community settings to aid the triage of suspicious skin lesions (Esteva et al, 2016; Marchetti et al, 2018). We aim to address the following questions: |
Project organisation | |
Start date: | 1st April 2020 |
End date: | 31st March 2025 |
Contact person: | Dr Owain Jones |
Contact Details: | Primary Care Unit Strangeways Research Laboratory Worts Causeway Cambridge CB1 8RN UK E-mail: otj24@medschl.cam.ac.uk |
Collaborators: | Dr Fiona Walter (University of Cambridge) Professor Steve Morris (University of Cambridge) Professor Jon Emery (University of Melbourne) Professor Anne Spencer (University of Exeter) |
Funding information | |
Funding Organisation: | CRUK Cambridge Centre Clinical Studentship |
|
|
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications | |
Jones OT, Calanzani N, Saji S, Duffy SW, Emery J, Hamilton W, Singh H, de Wit NJ, Walter FM. Artificial Intelligence Techniques That May Be Applied to Primary Care Data to Facilitate Earlier Diagnosis of Cancer: Systematic Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/23483 |
Title: |
Using clinical and consumer devices to enhance screening for atrial fibrillation |
|
||||
Project abbreviation: |
U-CCODES-AF |
|
||||
Project Description: |
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is an abnormal heart rhythm which increases the risk of stroke when untreated. Consequently, AF screening programmes are now being developed. These involve taking home a handheld clinical device, and checking your heart rhythm twice a day for a fortnight to search for AF. It may be possible to improve this process by using consumer devices such as fitness bands to check for AF in daily life. |
|
||||
Methodology description: |
The aim of this project is to establish how clinical and consumer devices can best be used to identify AF. Firstly, we will establish criteria for detecting possible AF from fitness bands. Secondly, we will develop a 30 second test to identify patients who are unlikely to have AF, so they do not have to use a device at home. Thirdly, we will assess different devices for home rhythm monitoring. |
|
||||
Project organisation |
|
|||||
Start date: |
24th February 2020 |
|
||||
End date: |
23rd February 2025 |
|
||||
Contact person: |
|
|||||
Contact Details: |
Primary Care Unit |
|
||||
Collaborative: |
This project is conducted in collaboration with the Research Centre for Biomedical Engineering at City, University of London |
|
||||
Funding information |
|
|||||
Funding Organisation: |
British Heart Foundation |
|
||||
|
|
|||||
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
|||||
|
||||||
Title: | A blended lifestyle intervention to preserve lean mass, muscle strength, exercise tolerance and quality of life in multi-morbid older people |
Project Description: | Multi-morbidity, the coexistence of two or more long-term medical conditions, (1) has wide ranging negative impacts on patients’ lives. (2) A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership involving multi-morbid older adults identified promotion of independence and physical well-being as key priorities. (3) Yet interventions tested are often focused on single underlying disease pathway; and salutogenic approaches that use best practice and support health and well-being by working with the patients’ are missing. This study seeks to test a multi-component intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), who typify the multi-morbid older adult. |
Project organisation | |
Start date: | 1st August 2021 |
End date: | 31th August 2025 |
Contact person: | Faye Forsyth |
Contact Details: | Primary Care Unit East Forvie Building Robinson Way Cambridge CB2 0SR UK E-mail: fc349@cam.ac.uk |
Collaborators: | Professor Christi Deaton Professor Jonathan Mant Dr Victoria Keevil |
Funding information | |
Funding Organisation: | Evelyn Trust |
Funding Amount: | £23,069 |
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: | STRAT-BCS – Developing a strategy for implementation of risk stratification into bowel cancer screening programmes |
Project Description: | The overall aim of this study is to develop a strategy for implementation of risk stratification within bowel cancer screening programmes.
Specific objectives are to:
|
Funder information: | National Institute for Health Research Advanced Fellowship |
Collaborators: | Professor Simon Griffin (Primary Care Unit) Professor Steve Morris (Primary Care Unit) Dr Mark Kroese (PHG Foundation) Professor Mary Dixon-Woods (THIS Institute) Dr Stephen John (Department of History and Philosophy of Science) Dr Sowmiya Moorthi (PHG Foundation) Dr Chloe Thomas (University of Sheffield) Dr Sophie Whyte (University of Sheffield) Phil Alsop (PPI) Philip Dondi (PPI) |
Project organisation | |
Start date: | 1st March 2021 |
End date: | 30th June 2024 |
Contact person: | Dr Juliet Usher-Smith |
Contact Details: | E-mail: jau20@medschl.cam.ac.uk |
Further Information, References and Publications | |
Title: |
Referrals and Outcomes for Adolescents and Children with Social Workers |
Project Abbreviation: |
COACHES |
Project Summary: |
A study of mental health referral patterns and outcomes for adolescents and children with social workers. |
Project objectives: |
Background Many children and young people with social work involvement (CYPwSW) experience mental health difficulties. Yet we know too little about the mental health care they receive from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). We do not know which young people get accepted or rejected for treatment. We do not know what treatments lead to positive change for these young people. We also do not know how much these treatments cost. Methods Our team will study anonymised administrative records for young people from two NHS Trusts. What counts as a good result from treatment for young people has various aspects. We will focus on four outcomes in evaluating treatments. These are: i) mental health; ii) education; iii) self-harm, suicidal thoughts, and suicide; iv) general wellbeing. Objectives We will: 1) Examine the profile, needs, and long-term outcomes for CYPwSW accepted or rejected by CAMHS in South London 2) Distinguish forms of CAMHS treatment, and analyse which forms lead to positive outcomes for CYPwSW in South London. We will also examine how factors such as poverty and ethnicity impact how well treatments work. 3) Repeat the analysis in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, to check our findings. 4) Analyse how much the treatments cost and quantify how much positive outcomes cost. 5) Analyse clinical notes and conduct interviews to understand the experiences and treatment of CYPwSW. 6) Spread word of our findings and recommendations, including holding a Parliamentary Roundtable. Experts by Experience Experts by experience will have a core role across the project. This will include co-leading the qualitative studies and co-organising a Parliamentary Roundtable. Outputs We will publish a report focused on practice implications, and create training for professionals. We will write these together with the Association of Child and Adolescent Mental Health and the British Association of Social Workers. Our study will show the outcomes of routine clinical practice in CAMHS. In doing so we will lay essential ground for future Randomised Control Trials to improve provision for CYPwSW.
|
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
1st September 2022 |
End date: |
31st August 2026 |
Contact person: |
|
Contact Details: |
Primary Care Unit |
Project contributors: |
Tamsin Ford (co-PI), Rick Hood, Barry Coughlan, Taliah Drayak, Francesca Crozier-Roche, Jack Smith, David Graham, Dustin Hutchinson, Ayla Humphrey, Matt Woolgar, Daisy Kornblum, Rudolf Cardinal, Luke Geoghegan, Tessa Morgan, Yeosun Yoon, Nicole Marshall, Julia Mannes, Dihini Pilimatalawwe |
Partner instuitutions: |
Kingston University, South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridgeshire & Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, The Care Leaver’s Association, the British Association of Social Workers, & National Children’s Bureau |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR & Foundations |
Funding amount: |
£1,321,043 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
https://www.ncb.org.uk/what-we-do/research-evidence/our-research-project...
Title: |
Adapting, Disease self-management and Acknowledgement by Psychosocial Targeted interventions |
Project Abbreviation: |
ADAPT Trial |
Project Summary: |
Over 5% of the population will develop an autoimmune rheumatic disease at some stage during their lives, with fatigue reported as the most prevalent and life-changing symptom. ADAPT is a randomised controlled trial to investigate the effectiveness of online instructor-led group exercise classes (Pilates or Tai Chi, 50 minutes, twice a week over 8 weeks) on fatigue (primary outcome), depression, anxiety, resilience, cognitive dysfunction, physical activity and quality of life.) |
Project objectives: |
Background 420 patients with rheumatological diseases will be recruited and randomised into one of three groups: 1) Pilates classes 2) Tai Chi classes, 3) Control (usual care). Participants will complete questionnaires on their health and quality of life at baseline, 8 weeks, 16 weeks, and 6 months. In addition, the ADAPT trial will: Evaluate the cost and cost-effectiveness of online classes versus usual care, from the perspective of the NHS, patients and families. Gather participant views and experiences of the online exercise classes via in-depth qualitative interviews. |
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
1st April 2025 |
End date: |
31st March 2027 |
Contact person: |
Dr Melanie Sloan and Prof Felix Naughton |
Contact Details: |
Primary Care Unit
Mel Sloan (Principal Investigator), mas229@medschl.cam.ac.uk
Miranda Van Emmenis (Trial Coordinator), mv404@medschl.cam.ac.uk
|
Project contributors: |
Multidisciplinary team encompassing patient partners, rheumatology, neuropsychiatry, health psychology and health economics. |
Partner institutions: |
University of East Anglia, Kings College London
|
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR |
Funding amount: |
£493,000 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
Title: |
Co-design and evaluation of an intervention to increase UPTake of pUlmonary RehabilitatioN for people living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
|
Project Abbreviation: |
UPTURN |
Project Summary: |
Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), a programme of exercise and education, is a NHS priority treatment for people with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Completing PR reduces breathlessness, improves quality of life and reduces hospital admissions. Half of those referred to PR do not attend their PR appointment, especially in deprived and ethnic minority communities. The project aims to improve uptake of PR in communities where uptake is low.
|
Project objectives: |
In previous research we talked to patients, carers and clinicians about why people do not attend. We identified five patient needs for a solution to improve uptake. Patients wanted personalised, culturally-tailored and locally tailored information to understand how PR applies to them. Clinicians told us the intervention needed to happen outside time-pressured appointments. We will: Work with patients, clinicians and wider stakeholders to co-design and evaluate a personalised, culturally-tailored and locally-tailored intervention to increase PR uptake irrespective of deprivation or ethnicity. Include communities at the intersection of poverty and minority ethnicity in the design and evaluation. Embed an Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) plan throughout the study to support this. Develop a strategy to put the intervention into practice. |
Project impact: |
To improve uptake of PR in communities where the need is greatest. |
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
1st June 2023 |
End date: |
1st January 2028 |
Contact person: |
Dr Jonathan Fuld and Professor Steve Morris |
Contact Details: |
Primary Care Unit
|
Project contributors: |
Dr Frances Early, Professor Mike Kelly |
Partner institutions: |
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Universities of East Anglia, Leicester, Edinburgh, York, UCL.
|
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR (Award no, 204401) |
Funding amount: |
£2,835,161
|
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
Title: |
Investigating neuropsychiatric symptom prevalence and impact in rheumatology and autoimmune patient experiences.
|
Project Abbreviation: |
INSPIRE |
Project Summary: |
The INSPIRE project consists of a series of mixed-methods studies investigating the experiences of rheumatology and other autoimmune disease patients. The INSPIRE team consists of researchers, patients, charity partners and clinicians from a range of specialities, and we feel that this multi-disciplinary approach is key to our aim of improving patient experiences and care.
Recent studies have investigated the prevalence and impact of nightmares, hallucinations and cognitive dysfunction among rheumatology patients. Current projects are exploring medication (MEDINSPIRE) and flares (INSPIRE-Flare) in autoimmune diseases. MEDINSPIRE is exploring the types and combinations of medications used in different disease groups, comparing current and ever use of medications between disease groups and investigating the wellbeing of patients while undergoing these treatments. INSPIRE-Flare is investigating flare triggers, preventers and prodromes (‘bad signs’ that a flare is imminent) in autoimmune disease patients. Our survey will ask patients about a range of factors which may trigger, prevent or precede a flare, as well as related topics such as how patients define a flare and the support they rely on for managing flares.
|
Project objectives: |
The research conducted by the INSPIRE project is aimed at improving patient experiences and care. Our current projects aim to do this by increasing understanding about the effects of medication and the triggers and progression of symptoms in flares, to improve disease and flare management.
Specifically, MEDINSPIRE aims: To identify the types and combinations of medication and describe their lifetime and current prevalences; To compare the types and combinations of medication between patients’ groups (i.e., disease and demographic groups); To compare the level of well-being of patients within each SARD group during therapy applying the combinations of medication; To measure and compare the association of current and “ever” use of different medications with patient mental health and wellbeing.
INSPIRE-Flare aims: To investigate and compare the prevalence of different triggers and preventers of flares in different SARDs and other autoimmune diseases. To investigate and compare the differences in disease progression symptoms (including prodromes) in different SARDs and other autoimmune diseases. To investigate whether triggers, preventers and prodromes are the same for each flare for each patient. To understand how patients identify triggers, preventers and prodromes. To understand whether patient awareness of triggers, preventers and prodromes improves management of flares. |
Project impact: |
Our previous studies have increased awareness about invisible symptoms experiences by rheumatology patients, such as nightmares and hallucinations. They have also found that clinicians underestimate the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in rheumatology patients and highlighted the benefits of inter-speciality communication and patient partnership in care. Other studies have explored the long-term effects of misdiagnosis on patients’ mental health, help-seeking behaviour and medical relationships.
Our earlier focus was on the attribution of neuropsychiatric symptoms. Although there are no definitive answers to the challenging attribution question, it was of great importance due to the different treatment requirements. For example, if symptoms are largely attributed to the direct impact of the diseases on the brain/nervous system it may require immunosuppression but if symptoms are medication induced, unrelated, or indirectly related (e.g. depression due to living with an unpredictable life-changing disease) then different treatment plans may be required.
We hope that MEDINSPIRE will increase understanding about the prescription of various types and combinations of different medications for different disease groups. It will also shed light on the effects of different medications on disease symptoms and other outcomes such as mental health and wellbeing.
We hope that INSPIRE-Flare will improve awareness about the range of factors which can trigger and prevent flares and the prevalence of each of these in different autoimmune diseases. We hope that this information will help patients and clinicians to manage flares, reducing their frequency and impact. INSPIRE-Flare will also explore the symptoms which precede flares (prodromes) and compare these between disease groups. We hope that improving understanding about prodromes will enable early identification and treatment for flares.
|
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
1st January 2020 |
End date: |
1st February 2027 |
Contact person: |
Dr Melanie Sloan |
Contact Details: |
Primary Care Unit
|
Project contributors: |
Martha Piper, Efthalia Massou, Dr Alice Tunks, Prof David D’Cruz, Sydnae Taylor, Kaira Kuhu Naidu, James Brimicombe, Prof David Jayne, Prof Guy Leschziner, Prof Felix Naughton, Dr Mervi Pitkanen, Dr Thomas Pollak, Ellie Dalby, Lucy Calderwood Dr Michael Zandi, Prof James, Bourgeois, Michael Bosley, Dr Jasmine Yan, Sam Sloan, Dr Sharmilee Gnanapavan, Dr Arvind Kaul, Prof Alessandra Bortoluzzi, Dr Laura Andreoli, Prof Caroline Gordon, Arjoon Arunasalam, Avni Varshney, Uisce Pargiter |
Partner institutions: |
Kings College London, Barts, NHNN, Guys and St Thomas’, UEA, St Georges’, plus international collaborators in California (UCLA) and Italy. |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
The Lupus Trust |
|
|
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
Publications:
Sloan, M., Pollak, T. A., Massou, E., Leschziner, G., Andreoli, L., Harwood, R., Bosley, M., Pitkanen, M., Diment, W., Bortoluzzi, A., Zandi, M. S., Ubhi, M., Gordon, C., Jayne, D., Naughton, F., Barrere, C., Wincup, C., Brimicombe, J., Bourgeois, J. A., & D'Cruz, D. (2025). Neuropsychiatric symptoms in systemic lupus erythematosus: mixed methods analysis of patient-derived attributional evidence in the international INSPIRE project. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 64(3), 1179–1192. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keae194
Sloan, M., Bourgeois, J. A., Leschziner, G., Pollak, T. A., Pitkanen, M., Harwood, R., Bosley, M., Bortoluzzi, A., Andreoli, L., Diment, W., Brimicombe, J., Ubhi, M., Barrere, C., Naughton, F., Gordon, C., & D'Cruz, D. (2024). Neuropsychiatric prodromes and symptom timings in relation to disease onset and/or flares in SLE: results from the mixed methods international INSPIRE study. EClinicalMedicine, 73, 102634. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102634
Sloan, M., Wincup, C., Harwood, R., Pollak, T. A., Massou, E., Bosley, M., Pitkanen, M., Zandi, M. S., Leschziner, G., Barrere, C., Ubhi, M., Andreoli, L., Brimicombe, J., Diment, W., Jayne, D., Gordon, C., Naughton, F., & D'Cruz, D. (2024). Prevalence and identification of neuropsychiatric symptoms in systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases: an international mixed methods study. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 63(5), 1259–1272. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kead369
Sloan, M., Lever, E., Gordon, C., Harwood, R., Georgopoulou, S., Naughton, F., Wincup, C., Sutton, S., & D'Cruz, D. (2022). Medication decision-making and adherence in lupus: patient-physician discordance and the impact of previous 'adverse medical experiences'. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 61(4), 1417–1429. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab534
Sloan, M., Bosley, M., Blane, M., Holloway, L., Barrere, C., D'Cruz, D., Walia, C., Naughton, F., Howard, P., Sutton, S., & Gordon, C. (2021). 'But you don't look sick': a qualitative analysis of the LUPUS UK online forum. Rheumatology international, 41(4), 721–732. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00296-020-04726-x
Sloan, M., Bosley, M., Gordon, C., Pollak, T. A., Mann, F., Massou, E., Morris, S., Holloway, L., Harwood, R., Middleton, K., Diment, W., Brimicombe, J., Lever, E., Calderwood, L., Dalby, E., Dunbar, E., D'Cruz, D., & Naughton, F. (2025). "I still can't forget those words": mixed methods study of the persisting impact on patients reporting psychosomatic and psychiatric misdiagnoses. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), keaf115. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keaf115
Sloan, M., Harwood, R., Sutton, S., D'Cruz, D., Howard, P., Wincup, C., Brimicombe, J., & Gordon, C. (2020). Medically explained symptoms: a mixed methods study of diagnostic, symptom and support experiences of patients with lupus and related systemic autoimmune diseases. Rheumatology advances in practice, 4(1), rkaa006. https://doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkaa006
Project name: |
The Cambridge Conversation Study |
Project Summary: |
We are looking into the experiences of older people who have been in hospital and what a good quality of life means to them. We are also looking into the experiences of their relatives/friends, and their doctors and nurses. The project has two phases. In the first part, we will be speaking to older people, their relatives/friends and their doctors and nurses to understand their experiences. In the second part, we will invite these same people to come together to think about ways care could be improved. |
Project objectives: |
Background We will use the findings of this research to improve the conversations doctors, nurses and other healthcare practitioners have with older patients and their relatives/friends. The overall aim of the research is to improve the lives and care of older people. |
Start date: |
1st April 2022 |
End date: |
1st April 2028 |
Principal Investigator: |
Dr Sarah Hopkins |
Project contributors: |
Prof Stephen Barclay, Prof Mike Kelly, Dr Rhian Simpson, Prof Rowan Harwood |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Jointly funded by The Dunhill Medical Trust and the British Geriatrics Society |
Title: |
Personalised care and patient experiences in hospital near end of life |
Project Abbreviation: |
PERSPEX |
Project Summary: |
Dr Kingdon will conduct a review of current UK health policy, an analysis of survey data from bereaved relatives, and a hospital-based ethnography involving observing and speaking to patients thought to be in the last year of life, their families and healthcare professionals involved in their care. Through this, he aims to gain insights into how ‘personalised care’ is conceptualised by these different groups; the extent to which delivering or receiving personalised care is a priority for staff, patients and families; the degree to which hospital inpatients are actually receiving ‘personalised care’, and the impact on patients when they receive personalised care or not. |
Project objectives: |
We anticipate that the project will result in a clear, clinically relevant and co-created definition of personalised care as related to patients with palliative care needs; an understanding of the barriers and facilitators of integrating personalised care into routine care of patients with palliative care needs in the hospital inpatient setting; an understanding of the current landscape of UK hospital-based end of life care and the degree to which patients receive personalised care; an understanding of patients’ and families’ perspectives on important unanswered questions relating to personalised care for patients with palliative care needs; and an understanding of which elements of personalised care are particularly important to patients and families. We anticipate this evidence will inform the design of undergraduate and postgraduate training curricula as well as standards for Integrated Care Boards and Trusts regarding personalised palliative care. |
Project impact: |
Through dissemination of this project’s results, we anticipate that: Health leaders and clinicians will have access to more evidence and more evidence-based resources regarding the importance of and the implementation of personalised palliative care. This research will add substance regarding narratives about personalised care in the NHS and beyond, thus policymakers will have access to additional evidence regarding implementation of existing policy and development of new policy in this field. Patients will be treated by clinicians with access to aforementioned evidence, leading to a higher likelihood of positive experiences of care. |
Start date: |
18th October 2024 |
End date: |
18th October 2027 |
Principal Investigator: |
Dr Arjun Kingdon |
Project contributors: |
Prof. Stephen Barclay, Dr Sarah Yardley, Prof. Jonathan Silverman, Prof. Robbie Duschinsky, Dr Anna Spathis |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
The Edward Showler Foundation |
Funding amount: |
£100,000 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Project Title: |
Understanding Patients’ Experiences of Dying at Home |
Project Abbreviation: |
HomeCare |
Project Summary: |
More people with terminal conditions in the UK are dying at home. While dying at home is often idealised as a peaceful, comfortable experience surrounded by family in a familiar space, the realities can be different. Some bereaved family carers report that their loved ones experienced distress in the last week of life and observed that their relative were ‘not at peace’ during their final days. However, the patient voice has rarely been heard. This project aims to better understand the realities of dying at home by synthesising published evidence about personal experiences of patients in the UK to identify ways to improve home end-of-life care. |
Project objectives: |
The objective of this project is to explore the lived experiences of adult patients dying at home in the UK, focusing on their final months of life. We aim to identify common and divergent themes in patients' experiences, highlighting areas where end-of-life care can be improved. This project will synthesise existing qualitative research to provide evidence-based recommendations for enhancing care for both patients and their families at the end of life. |
Project impact: |
Our findings will help inform healthcare providers and policymakers. Findings will be shared widely through an academic publication, conference presentations, and a focused, brief policy brief for care commissioners and healthcare service providers. |
Start date: |
25th November 2025 |
End date: |
31st January 2026 |
Principal Investigators: |
Dr. Ben Bowers, University of Cambridge Joodi Mourhli, University of Cambridge |
Project contributors: |
Krzysztof Sosnowski, University of Cambridge Isla Kuhn, University of Cambridge Riddhiman Ghosh, University of Cambridge Helen Cai, University of Cambridge Dr Lucy Pocock, University of Bristol |
Partner institution: |
University of Bristol |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East of England |
Title: |
JAMS - Injectable Medication Study |
Project Summary: |
This interdisciplinary project seeks to understand the human and system factors involved in the safe, effective and timely use of injectable end-of-life symptom control medications for adults dying at home. We are advancing an inclusive design research methodology and identify with stakeholders where and how systems for using injectable medications can be improved. Methods: Drawing on engineering, patient safety and social science disciplines, we will use innovative systems-driven inclusive design methods to examine the human and system factors involved in the use of injectable end-of-life medications; where and how this complex adaptive system can be improved will be investigated through three sequential stages. Stage 1. Mixed-methods analysis of reported patient safety incidents occurring in England and Wales using the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) database. Stage 2. Longitudinal patient-centred case studies exploring the views, experiences and interactions of patients prescribed medications, their family caregivers and clinicians. Stage 3. Stakeholder focus groups with patients, family caregivers and healthcare teams exploring key issues, generating further knowledge of systems for using medications and how these can be improved. Analysis (Stage 1) and fieldwork (Stage 2) are currently underway. |
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
8th April 2024 |
End date: |
15th January 2027 |
Contact person: |
Dr Ben Bowers |
Project contributors: |
Dr Rosanna Fennessy, Dr Sioned Gwyn (Swansea University), Prof. Andrew Carson-Stevens (Cardiff University), Prof. Kristian Pollock (University of Nottingham), Prof. John Clarkson (Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge), Prof. Stephen Barclay. |
Partner institutions: |
Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge; University of Nottingham; Cardiff University |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Wellcome Trust Early Career Award [Ben Bowers] and NIHR ARC Affiliated Study |
Title: |
GPEXTRA - General Practitioners’ perspectives on their current and future role in palliative and end of life care |
Project Summary: |
General Practitioners (GPs), along with community nurses and wider palliative care teams provide most of the clinical care for patients who die in the community. Demand for care is increasing as more people die at home, but consensus over GPs’ roles and responsibilities in end-of-life care is absent. Our UK–wide qualitative research study aims to gain new knowledge and in-depth understanding of the future role of GPs in palliative and end of life care to best inform whole-system service design and workforce development. We are purposively sampling and interviewing up to 25 GPs from across the UK. Fieldwork is currently underway. |
Project organisation |
|
Start date: |
9th December 2024 |
End date: |
31st March 2026 |
Contact person: |
Dr Ben Bowers |
Project contributors: |
TBC, Dr Louisa Polak, Dr Allison Bentley, Dr Sarah Mitchell (University of Leeds) and Prof. Stephen Barclay. |
Partner institutions: |
University of Leeds |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East of England |
Title: |
Improving communication of prognostic uncertainty in palliative and end of life care contexts: A realist review |
Project Summary: |
When a person has a life-limiting illness they often want to know how long they have left to live. However most serious illnesses are unpredictable and increasingly people live with multiple illnesses, making it difficult to know how much time they have left (prognosis). It is important to communicate uncertainty about prognosis, as misunderstandings can have financial, personal and emotional implications for the patient and their family. Researchers and clinicians have shared multiple examples and ideas about how best to do this, but we do not know what the best approaches to communicating uncertainty about prognosis are. We are conducting a realist evidence synthesis regarding communication of prognostic uncertainty so that we can identify what ‘works’ in such conversations. This approach involves developing an initial theory of what works when communicating uncertainty about how much time a person has left in different contexts, then searching for literature, extracting information from the literature and using it to refine and develop the theory further. We will use the findings to develop practical recommendations for communication of uncertainty about prognosis, which can be used to improve how these conversations are conducted in practice. |
Project objectives: |
Research aim: To understand how to improve communication of prognostic uncertainty in (potential) palliative and end of life care settings. Research question: How, why, for whom, and in what contexts does communication of prognostic uncertainty for palliative and end of life care patients “work” (or not)? 5.Project impact (the impact that the project has delivered or seeks to achieve, 150-200 words)Multi Line Text. Findings will be shared with hospice stakeholders and service users, political leaders and civil society groups. The review outcomes and recommendations (including the developed programme theory) will be shared via the Research Team’s clinical networks (such as Coventry and Warwickshire Integrated Care Board; NHS England Palliative and End of Life Care Team; ARC East of England and the National Association of Palliative Medicine), as well as via Marie Curie’s connections. Our academic outputs will be disseminated to health and social care researchers via conference presentations (e.g. Marie Curie annual conference) and a peer-reviewed article published open access. These findings will also have direct relevance to health professional education and we plan to include them in undergraduate and postgraduate medical and nursing training at the Universities of Cambridge, Warwick and Birmingham and will advocate for them to be included in relevant national curricula. We will produce a simple one-page summary of results for sharing with healthcare professionals and run an educational event for Marie Curie clinical staff, informed by the review findings and how they can be implemented in practice. |
Start date: |
1st April 2024 |
End date: |
30th June 2025 |
Principal Investigator: |
Dr Simon Etkind |
Project contributors: |
John MacArtney, Katharine Weetman, Farhad Shokraneh, Katy Hyams |
Partner institutions: |
University of Warwick, University of Birmingham |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Marie Curie |
Funding amount: |
£14,997 |
Title: |
PrimaryBreathe |
Project Summary: |
PrimaryBreathe is a 5-year research programme funded by the National Institute of Health and Care Research. The research is aiming to increase the support available for people living with chronic breathlessness and for their family carers. We are developing and testing a treatment that does not involve additional medicines. It can be accessed through local GP surgeries (primary care). |
Project objectives: |
|
Start date: |
1st September 2022 |
End date: |
31st August 2027 |
|
|
Principal Investigator: |
Dr. Anna Spathis & Dr. Jonathan Mant |
Project contributors: |
Dr. Lindsey Berends, Dr. Sarah Hoare, Cheryl Chapman, Joe Parsison, Maria Goodall, James Brimicombe, Cassie Hoyland, James Cantwell, Annie Schiff |
Partner institutions: |
University of Leicester, Centre for Ethnic Health Research, University of Hull, King's College London, King's College Hospitals, University of East Anglia, Keele University, Moorfields Eye Hospital |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) |
Project Title: |
Screening for Atrial Fibrillation with ECG to Reduce stroke |
Project Abbreviation: |
SAFER Programme |
Project Summary: |
Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is a major risk factor for ischaemic stroke unless treated with anticoagulant medication. Detecting atrial fibrillation can be difficult because it often comes and goes (paroxysmal) and people may be asymptomatic. Currently there is insufficient evidence to support the implementation of a national atrial fibrillation screening programme to reduce stroke. The question we will be answering: is screening for AF effective and cost effective in reducing stroke and other key outcomes compared to current practice? |
Project objectives: |
Atrial fibrillation (AF) may not be associated with any symptoms, but is linked to increased risk of stroke, heart attack, dementia and premature death. About 10 in 100 (10%) of strokes happen in people unaware that they have atrial fibrillation. However, therapy with blood thinning medication (anticoagulant) is highly effective at reducing the risk. At present, some GPs look for atrial fibrillation opportunistically by simply taking the pulse of patients, or using a diagnostic device such as a hand-held electrocardiogram (ECG). However, this is not done in a systematic way, and only in some general practices. One problem with this approach is that some people do not have atrial fibrillation all the time but go into and out of an irregular heart rhythm (known as paroxysmal or intermittent AF). So in this research, participants (patients aged 70 or over recruited from GP practices) are loaned a handheld ECG recorder, provided by Zenicor, to record a single lead ECG repeatedly at home for 2-4 weeks. SAFER is a large programme of research involving 250 GP practices in England and over 100,000 patients. Due to report in 2028, we will determine if screening does lead to fewer strokes, and whether this is a good use of NHS resources. |
Project impact: |
Many clinicians support screening for AF to reduce stroke, However there is currently insufficient evidence to support a national screening programme, and whether any harms associated with screening are outweighed by benefits.
We will determine if screening for atrial fibrillation leads to fewer strokes, and whether this is a good use of NHS resources. This will inform the decision about whether the NHS should offer a national atrial fibrillation screening programme. |
Start date: |
1st October 2018 |
End date: |
31st March 2028 |
Principal Investigator: |
Professor Jonathan Mant |
Project contributors: |
Simon Griffin, Steve Morris, James Brimicombe, Duncan Edwards, Andrew Dymond, Kate Williams, Rakesh Modi, Lina Massou |
Partner institutions: |
University of Bristol, University of Liverpool, University of Oxford, University of Sydney, University of Copenhagen, Karolinska Institutet |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR (School for Primary Care research and Programme Grant for Applied Research) and NHS England |
Funding amount: |
£7,000,000 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
|
SAFER website: https://www.safer.phpc.cam.ac.uk/ SAFER publications: https://www.safer.phpc.cam.ac.uk/trial-news/outputs/publications/ SAFER Trial news: https://www.safer.phpc.cam.ac.uk/trial-news/ |
Title: |
CanRisk-GP: a feasibility study of incorporating proactive multifactorial breast cancer risk assessment into general practice |
Project Abbreviation: |
CanRisk-GP |
Project Summary: |
CanRisk is a risk assessment tool that implements the BOADICEA multifactorial breast cancer risk model. Offering risk assessment using CanRisk in general practice has the potential to identify more women at moderate or high risk of developing breast cancer and improve their management and the appropriateness of referrals. In this study, we plan to invite women aged 40-49 years from across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough to complete a breast cancer risk assessment using a public-facing version of the CanRisk tool and provide saliva samples for PGS. This study will provide evidence on the feasibility and acceptability of offering cancer risk assessment including PGS in general practice; whether this approach can identify women at above-population level risk of breast cancer who would otherwise not had access to risk-reducing options; and the costs associated with implementing proactive multifactorial breast cancer risk assessment in women under 50 within general practice. |
Project objectives: |
The overall aims of this study are to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and psychological impact of our intervention, that is, proactively offering multifactorial breast cancer risk assessment incorporating PGS using CanRisk in general practice, and to collect estimates of outcomes and data on costs and healthcare utilisation. The latter will inform the design of a future trial and a health economic analysis to model the estimated reductions in breast cancer incidence and mortality if our intervention were to be introduced in general practice across the UK. The specific objectives are:
|
Project impact: |
This is the first study to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and psychological impact of incorporating proactive multifactorial breast cancer risk assessment into general practice for women aged 40-49. It is also one of the first studies to assess the feasibility and acceptability of incorporating polygenic risk scores within risk assessments conducted within general practice. Therefore, this study will provide important data on the potential of adopting a proactive approach to breast cancer risk assessment in this setting and will generate data to inform the implementation and clinical utility of using PGS more generally within general practice. Furthermore, this work will contribute towards building the evidence for future larger scale research on the uptake of risk-reducing options among women at moderate and high risk of breast cancer and health economic analyses to model the estimated reductions in breast cancer incidence and mortality if multifactorial risk assessment using CanRisk were to be introduced in general practice across the UK. The results should also inform similar implementation in other countries. |
Start date: |
28th November 2024 |
End date: |
31st August 2026 |
Principal Investigator: |
Dr. Juliet Usher-Smith |
Project contributors: |
Antonis C Antoniou, Stephanie Archer, Jack Broome, Tim Carver, Joe Dennis, Douglas F Easton, Jon Emery, Lorenzo Ficorella, Amy Lafont, Steve Morris, Adam Stokes, Francisca Stutzin Donoso, Marc Tischkowitz, Fiona M Walter, and Cameron Wilson. |
Partner institutions: |
Queen Mary University of London, University of Melbourne |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Cancer Research UK |
Funding amount: |
£850,000 (Funded within the overall CanRisk programme grant) |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Link to feasibility study protocol https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN17376192
- Stutzin Donoso, F., Usher-Smith, J. A., Antoniou, A. C., et al (2025). Primary care online training on multifactorial breast cancer risk: pre-post evaluation study. BJGP Open. In Press.
- Stutzin Donoso, F., Carver, T., Ficorella, L., et al. (2024). Improving the communication of multifactorial cancer risk assessment results for different audiences: a co-design process. Journal of Community Genetics. doi: 10.1007/s12687-024-00729-4
- Usher-Smith, J.A., Hindmarch, S., French, D., et al. (2023). Proactive breast cancer risk assessment in primary care: a review based on the principles of screening. British Journal of Cancer. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-023-02145-w
- Archer, S. & Stutzin Donoso, F., Carver T., Yue A., et al. (2023). Exploring the barriers to and facilitators of implementing CanRisk in primary care: a qualitative thematic framework analysis. British Journal of General Practice. doi: 10.3399/BJGP.2022.0643.
Title: |
Proactive Risk Evaluation for the Early Detection of Breast Cancer in younger women |
Project Abbreviation: |
PREVENT-Breast |
Project Summary: |
Women at moderate or high risk of breast cancer are eligible for breast imaging prior to the start of population-based screening programmes to enable detection of breast cancer earlier. Data from clinical trials indicates that this reduces mortality from breast cancer in this group by 12-29%. However, only a small fraction (<10%) of these moderate or high-risk women are identified through current care in the UK and existing pathways exacerbate existing health inequalities. This project aims to generate recommendations for the implementation of risk-assessment and subsequent management and breast imaging of women under 50 years that are evidence-based, equitable and aligned with the needs of women and the wider healthcare service. |
Project objectives: |
Objective 1- To identify and co-design potential strategies for implementing BC risk assessment within clinical care. 1.1. Systems-based analysis with key healthcare and policy stakeholders to map current care pathways, identify potential implementation strategies across primary and secondary care and assess the capacity and readiness within the system for change. 1.2. Focus groups with population groups experiencing poorer-than-average health access, experience and/or outcomes, with British Pakistani and Black African women, women from low SES neighbourhoods, women with learning disabilities, and women with long-term mental health conditions. 1.3. Discrete choice experiment with members of the public to quantify the relative importance of different attributes of potential implementation strategies identified from the previous studies. 1.4. Co-design of implementation approaches to develop programme specifications and materials for the most promising approaches identified from the previous studies. Objective 2- To evaluate the clinical effectiveness of risk assessment and implementation strategies. 2.1. Pilot study to ensure that all components of each approach to risk assessment are working properly 2.2. Randomised effectiveness-implementation study, with general practices as the unit of randomisation. Objective 3- To estimate the cost-effectiveness and clinical impact of implementation strategies. through modelling the potential for reductions in BC mortality resulting from early detection and the cost-effectiveness of the range of chosen strategies for implementation of risk assessment compared to current practice. Objective 4- A workshop informed by the evidence generated by this project and other on-going studies with key stakeholders to identify the next steps for research, policy and practice. |
Project impact: |
This research will provide evidence for transformational change in how and when early breast cancer is diagnosed in young women. Through a series of linked studies, culminating in a workshop with key stakeholders, we will advance scientific knowledge about organisational readiness for implementation of risk assessment and how best to engage traditionally underserved groups, conduct the first effectiveness study of implementing proactive BC risk assessment in this age group within the UK, and provide evidence-based guidance to policy makers about implementation approaches that are cost-effective, equitable and aligned with the needs of women and the wider healthcare service. By developing strategies to identify women at above-population level risk prior to entry into population-based BC and offering them earlier breast imaging, we will contribute to enabling interception through the detection of early cancers. The effectiveness trial and the cost-effectiveness analysis will increase our understanding of how to use information on hereditary cancers and risk to best target early detection programmes. Our strong focus on groups who typically experience poorer-than-average health access, experience and/or outcomes will seek to identify, understand and develop strategies to address inequalities in cancer early detection. |
Start date: |
September 2024 |
End date: |
February 2027 |
Principal Investigator: |
Dr Juliet Usher-Smith, University of Cambridge Professor David French, University of Manchester |
Project contributors: |
Dr Maria Valasaki (University of Cambridge) Dr Lily Taylor (University of Cambridge) Dr Rebecca Dennison (University of Cambridge) Dr Victoria Woof (University of Manchester) Dr Francisca Stutzin-Donoso (University of Cambridge) Dr Sacha Howell (University of Manchester) Professor Antonis Antoniou (University of Cambridge) Dr Stephanie Archer (University of Cambridge) Professor Steve Morris (University of Cambridge) Professor Marc Tischkowitz (University of Cambridge) Professor Doug Easton (University of Cambridge) Mr Stephen Sharp (University of Cambridge) Dr Penelope Moyle (University of Cambridge) Dr Kathryn Taylor (University of Cambridge) Professor Gareth Evans (University of Manchester) Dr Lorna McWilliams (University of Manchester) Dr Stuart Wright (University of Manchester) |
Partner institutions: |
University of Manchester |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection (ACED) |
Funding amount: |
£498,831 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: |
Vaccination in Pregnancy: Development work for an evaluation of a complex intervention to increase uptake of vaccinations in pregnancy among socio-economically and ethnically diverse populations |
Project Abbreviation: |
VIP Study |
Project Summary: |
Vaccinations against COVID-19, flu, whooping cough, and RSV can protect pregnant women and their babies from severe illness and premature death. However, uptake remains low, particularly among pregnant women in deprived areas and ethnically diverse communities.
To understand the reasons behind low vaccination rates and identify possible solutions, we reviewed existing research and conducted several studies in London's socio-economically and ethnically diverse areas. We gathered recommendations from pregnant women and healthcare providers. |
Project objectives: |
Planned work over 14 months
First, we will conduct research interviews with 10-15 midwives and ask their opinions. We will then work with patients, the public, and healthcare providers (pregnant women, women hoping to become pregnant, midwives, maternity assistants, and others) to develop an improvement programme to increase vaccine uptake during pregnancy.
This will focus on service users, providers and services.
For service users We will develop brief videos in which ‘real’ people, including midwives, pregnant women, their families, community stakeholders, and community champions, share their personal stories about vaccinations during pregnancy.
For providers We will develop materials and training for midwives and other healthcare professionals to increase their knowledge, skills and confidence in maternal vaccines and their capability, opportunity and motivation to advise pregnant women about vaccinations against COVID-19, influenza/flu, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and pertussis/whooping cough during pregnancy. To do this, we will use evidence on how and why people change what they do to improve their health.
Services We will explore possible service-level factors and organisational and systemic changes to improve vaccination rates. We will then conduct research interviews with 20 women and 20 midwives to obtain their feedback about our programme and adapt or amend it, if necessary.
Patient and public involvement Pregnant women recommended the work we have planned and helped design the research. We will work with them at every step, from designing the programme and research to sharing the results.
|
Project impact: |
Our study will develop a programme that can be delivered within the NHS and is acceptable to pregnant women, midwives, and hospital staff. We will then apply for funding to conduct a large-scale study across the UK to assess whether the programme increases vaccination rates during pregnancy, particularly among people in deprived areas and diverse ethnic communities, and whether it is cost-effective. The findings could inform service delivery and improve the health of mothers and their babies.
We will publish and share our findings with researchers, policymakers, healthcare providers, and the public, focusing on health research. The study has been approved by the NHS Health Research Authority. |
Start date: |
1st February 2025 |
End date: |
1st May 2026 |
Principal Investigator: |
|
Project contributors: |
Mohammad S Razai, Caroline Free, Pippa Oakeshott, Sima Berendes |
Partner institutions: |
City St George’s University of London; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; Kingston University London |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) |
Funding amount: |
£149,714.00
|
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres-projects-groups/vip-study
Title: |
Bowel Star UK |
|
|
Project Summary: |
Bowel Star UK is a cohort study based in England and Scotland generating evidence for risk-stratified screening intervals within bowel cancer screening. The programme will review the available evidence and modelling data before establishing a cohort to trial screening intervals informed by faecal immunochemical test (FIT) results. It will incorporate personal bowel cancer risk information and polygenic risk scores (PRS) to inform future risk modelling for bowel cancer as well as cost-effectiveness research and a process evaluation. Public acceptability is central to this body of work and interviews and surveys will be conducted with cohort study participants to explore their views and considerations toward risk-stratified bowel cancer screening. |
Project objectives: |
1. Examine the feasibility and outcomes of stratified bowel cancer screening based on faecal haemoglobin (FHb) concentration. 2. Examine whether a risk assessment process based on age, sex, PRS, family history and lifestyle factors can improve screening performance, over and above stratification by FHb alone. 3. Explore the acceptability of these approaches to participants. 4. Investigate the impact of stratified screening on organisational processes and costs within NHS bowel cancer screening, health inequalities and engagement of diverse communities. 5. Investigate whether stratified bowel cancer screening within NHS screening programmes can lead to improvements in cost-effectiveness. |
Project impact: |
This work will assess the patient and systems-level impact of incorporating risk-stratified bowel cancer screening according to FIT, the utility of additional risk information and the acceptability, feasibility and cost-effectiveness of such an approach. This will generate the necessary evidence for implementing risk-stratified screening for bowel cancer in the UK. |
Start date: |
1st May 2025 |
End date: |
1st April 2029 |
Principal Investigator: |
David Weller (University of Edinburgh), Peter Sasieni (Queen Mary University of London) |
Project contributors: |
Juliet Usher-Smith, Rebecca Dennison, Lily Taylor, James Kang (Cambridge) David Weller, Angela Niven, Debbie Cavers, Christine Campbell, Rachel Shrigley (Edinburgh) Peter Sasieni, Joy Li, Dharmishta Parmar, Rhian Gabe, Michael King (QMUL) Christian von Wagner, Jazzine Smith, Sophia Harmer, Judit Kovacs (UCL) Joanne Cairns, Hannah Miles (HYMS) Chloe Thomas (SCHaRR) |
Partner institutions: |
University of Edinburgh Queen Mary University of London UCL Hull York Medical School Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research
|
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Cancer Research UK |
Funding amount: |
£ £2,499,949.78
|
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/centres-projects-groups/vip-study
Title: |
Cancer Research UK Test, Evidence, Transition
|
Project Abbreviation: |
CRUK TET |
Project Summary: |
Cancer Research UK's (CRUK) ‘Test, Evidence, Transition’ programme aims to accelerate the effective adoption of service innovations whilst working to improve access for everyone to proven interventions. Specifically, this programme is seeking to optimise both the screening and symptomatic pathways to improve the early detection and diagnosis of colorectal cancers. We are working with frontline Health Service Delivery teams across England, Wales and Scotland, the Test Evidence Transition programme team at CRUK, and wider health systems stakeholders to co-design, deliver and evaluate targeted service improvement and innovation projects, generating evidence to enable effective and equitable adoption into mainstream practice. |
Project objectives: |
The programme has three objectives: Test service innovations to support optimal cancer pathways at a local level Evidence the process, outcome, and impact of implementation at a local level using appropriate methods Work with strategic partners to enable the effective and equitable Transition of identified best practice into mainstream practice across the health system
|
Project impact: |
Through this work we will support health service delivery teams to improve their rates of colorectal cancer detection. In doing so, we will develop understanding about how to make sustainable innovation in colorectal cancer services that can be scaled-up across the UK. |
Start date: |
1st April 2025 |
End date: |
30th September 2026 |
Principal Investigator: |
Juliet Usher-Smith, Brian Nicholson (University of Oxford) and Anna Dowrick (University of Oxford) |
Project contributors: |
Juliet Usher-Smith, Steve Morris, James Kang, Matthew Little, Lina Massou (Cambridge) Brian Nicholson, Anna Dowrick, Elspeth Davies, Lucy Moore, Sharon Tonner (Oxford) |
Partner institutions: |
University of Oxford |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Cancer Research UK |
Funding amount: |
£777,658.27 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: |
Evaluation of pilots of reduction in the threshold of FIT from 120 to 80 within the bowel cancer screening programme
|
Project Abbreviation: |
FIT@80 |
Project Summary: |
The Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP) in England is reducing the threshold for referral following a faecal immunochemical test (FIT) to 80ug/g, as evidence by UK National Screening Committee (UKNSC) guidance. Lowering the referral threshold will increase the sensitivity of the FIT test, diagnosing and preventing more bowel cancers. Delivering this represents a significant challenge to the BCSP and endoscopy services in particular. Therefore, a comprehensive service evaluation at early-adopter sites is required to identify and understand the systems, workforce and delivery models required across both symptomatic and screening pathways ahead of nationwide implementation.
|
Project objectives: |
1. Evaluate whether endoscopy transformation within the symptomatic pathways leads to endoscopy capacity being spared and whether this is utilised by the BCSP. 2. Evaluate the barriers and enablers to implementation at sites where it is expected that a referral threshold of 80ug/g will be challenging. 3. Evaluate the impact of an 80ug/g threshold on operational performance and patient outcomes, including bowel cancers and high-risk adenomas.
|
Project impact: |
This service evaluation will develop learnings that apply to screening and symptomatic endoscopy services as they transition to a reduced screening referral threshold of 80ug/g. The final report will be used to support sites across England as they implement the change and produce recommendations for national policy leads responsible for delivering the programme. |
Start date: |
1st March 2025 |
End date: |
31st August 2026 |
Principal Investigator: |
Agnė Ulytė, Frances Wu (RAND Europe) Juliet Usher-Smith, Nora Pashayan (University of Cambridge) |
Project contributors: |
Saoirse Moriarty, Kayleigh Sharp, Stephanie Stockton, Sorana Bucseneanu (RAND Europe), Nora Pashayan, Lily Taylor, James Kang (Cambridge) |
Partner institutions: |
RAND Europe |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NHS England |
Funding amount: |
£449,508.13 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: |
Diverse public perspectives in cancer screening and early diagnosis: generating evidence to support policy |
Project Abbreviation: |
PERSPECTIVES |
Project Summary: |
Many new innovations in cancer screening and early diagnosis raise complex choices, communication challenges and ethical issues for patients and members of the public. These need to be well-understood to ensure that policy recommendations are in line with public priorities and preferences, taking into account the perspectives of diverse groups. Topics within this remit will be selected for research focus over the course of the grant (including responses to timely issues).
|
Project objectives: |
The broad aims of this work will be to: 1) Take a multi-methods approach to produce in-depth and conclusive outputs on public and patient attitudes on complex issues related to cancer screening and diagnosis; 2) Prioritise inclusive research practice to ensure a diverse and inclusive approach, maximising the range of views identified; 3) Involve patients and the public at every stage of the research. |
Project impact: |
The work will generate policy-focused evidence that will contribute to the research literature and policy publications. We anticipate outputs being used by policy-focused bodies in decision-making. |
Start date: |
1st May 2025 |
End date: |
30th April 2027 |
Principal Investigator: |
Jo Waller, Laura Marlow (Queen Mary University of London) |
Project contributors: |
Becky Dennison (Cambridge), Georgia Black, Laura Marlow, Samantha Quaife, Suzanne Scott, Jo Waller (Queen Mary University of London) |
Partner institutions: |
Queen Mary University of London |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Cancer Research UK |
Funding amount: |
£1,082,209 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Title: |
Development, validation and feasibility testing of a new prediction tool (PREDICT-kidney) to promote informed decision-making about kidney cancer follow-up care
|
Project Abbreviation: |
PREDICT-kidney |
Project Summary: |
The aim of this project is to develop a new resource to support decision-making about follow-up care after surgery for localised RCC cancer.
|
Project objectives: |
Specific objectives include:
WP1: Develop a new model to predict risk of recurrent disease that includes competing risks WP2: Externally validate the new model, and a comparison of performance with existing models WP3: Implement the new model in a new online tool, co-designed by patients and clinicians, to calculate and display risk of recurrence WP4: Assess feasibility of conducting a full trial of the new tool within hospital clinics. |
Project impact: |
This project addresses key gaps in the evidence around kidney cancer follow-up care and aims to improve patient experience of this pathway. Outcomes will include a competing risks model for risk-stratified follow-up and an online tool to communicate patient risk. The new tool will provide a resource for clinicians when communicating decisions about follow-up care after surgery and, in the longer term, we plan to make this tool freely available to clinicians. We will also make the resources developed in the project available to other researchers.
|
Start date: |
1st February 2024 |
End date: |
31st May 2026 |
Principal Investigator: |
Juliet Usher-Smith and Hannah Harrison |
Project contributors: |
Juliet Usher-Smith, Hannah Harrison, Georgia Stimpson, Grant Stewart, Chiara Re, Carley Batley, Jessica Kitt, Lily Taylor, Antonis Antoniou, Angela Wood, Panayiotis Laouris, Steph Archer (University of Cambridge) Paul Pharoah (Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, Los Angeles, CA, USA) Alex Laird, James Blackmur (Western General Hospital, Edinburgh) Axel Bex (Royal Free Hospital, London) |
Partner institutions: |
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough ICS |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
NIHR Research for Patient Benefit |
Funding amount: |
£256,056 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN17719284
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40171395/
Title: |
NIHR Policy Research Unit on Cancer Awareness, Screening and Early Diagnosis |
|
|
Project Summary: |
The Unit is a multidisciplinary multi-institutional collaboration of investigators who together carry out research projects covering three main themes across Cancer awareness, screening and early diagnosis: Supporting People; Supporting Professionals; and Supporting Policymakers.
|
Project objectives: |
Specific projects currently being led from Cambridge include: A series of health economic analyses assessing the cost-effectiveness of novel diagnostic technology for single or multiple cancers Development of a core outcome set to inform future evaluation of novel cancer testing strategies in primary care A survey evaluating enthusiasm for cancer screening across the UK population A discrete choice experiment assessing public tolerance of lifetime harms in cancer screening A review and workshop addressing technical barriers to enable real-time multifactorial risk assessment within primary care.
|
Project impact: |
The aim is to provide policymakers with high-quality research findings that will help the NHS to diagnose 3 out of 4 people with cancer at an early-stage by 2028.
|
Start date: |
1st January 2024 |
End date: |
31st December 2028 |
Principal Investigator: |
Yoryos Lyratzopoulos at UCL and Brian Nicholson at the University of Oxford |
Project contributors: |
The Cambridge team members for these components of the Policy Research Unit are Becky Dennison, Juliet Usher-Smith, Steve Morris, Lily Taylor and Qin Xi. |
Partner institutions: |
UCL, University of Oxford, University of Leicester, University of Surrey |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
National Institute for Health and Social Care Research |
Funding amount: |
£5.5 million |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Details for all collaborators are on the main website - https://www.ucl.ac.uk/health/nihr-policy-research-unit-cancer-awareness-screening-and-early-diagnosis
Title: |
Understanding public receptiveness to risk-based approaches for cancer prevention and early diagnosis
|
Project Abbreviation: |
Ribbons
|
Project Summary: |
Development, testing and translation of innovations is important in the move towards earlier detection and diagnosis of cancer. A key part of this process is ensuring innovations are acceptable to the public and their development is informed by their preferences. Understanding the public’s position on new approaches and developing implementation and communication strategies accordingly is, therefore, important. Whilst some evidence exists in this space, further research is required to understand the public’s perspectives, and how they might be influenced by a range of factors. The Ribbons project therefore aimed to understand, in detail, public attitudes towards emerging risk-based cancer screening and diagnostic approaches and associated technologies. |
Project objectives: |
This research involved four studies. In these, we used six different examples of innovations: polygenic risk scores, geodemographic segmentation, minimally invasive tests, continuous monitoring of biomarkers, artificial intelligence, and wearable devices.
Study 1: The community juries aimed to provide a societal perspective on innovations and to identify particular factors of acceptability in using risk prediction for cancer screening or early detection. Participants were informed about the topic by experts in the field and were then encouraged to deliberate on what would be best for society overall. Researchers posed questions and the group were tasked with seeking a group verdict through discussion that often involved developing an understanding of others’ views and thinking beyond one’s own interests.
Studies 2 and 3: In think-aloud interviews and an online survey, we aimed to explore individual perspectives on innovations, qualitatively (study 2) and quantitatively (study 3). The questions included both asymptomatic (screening) and symptomatic scenarios to determine if this impacted likelihood of taking a risk assessment, acceptability of the innovation, and comfort of wider use of innovative risk-based approaches.
Study 4: The discrete choice experiment (DCE) aimed to quantify individuals’ preferences for risk-based approaches and innovations, again in symptomatic and asymptomatic scenarios, by utilising different attributes such as method, location, frequency, and accuracy of risk assessments to determine which was the most important in driving people’s preferences. |
Project impact: |
The findings of this research provide insight into the key requirements for public acceptability of these approaches. This will pave the way for future research and recommendations that can guide rapid adoption and implementation. These requirements include that innovations need to be logical and intuitive, burden of participation be minimised and/or in proportion to context, work sufficiently well, data be held securely, people have the option not to take part, and inequalities in society will not increase. |
Start date: |
1st November 2022 |
End date: |
31st March 2024 |
Principal Investigator: |
Becky Dennison, Juliet Usher-Smith, Jo Waller |
Project contributors: |
Becky Dennison, Juliet Usher-Smith, Reanna Clune, Joanna Tung, Jo Waller, Steve Morris |
Partner institutions: |
Queen Mary University of London |
Funding information |
|
Funding Organisation: |
Cancer Research UK |
Funding amount: |
£80,833 |
|
|
Further Information, References and Publications |
Policy report: https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/funding-for-researchers/research-opportunities-in-early-detection-and-diagnosis/early-detection-and-diagnosis-roadmap (see “Understanding public perceptions on new approaches”)
Publications:
Dennison RA, Clune RJ, Tung J, et al. Societal views on using risk-based innovations to inform cancer screening and referral policies: Findings from three community juries. BMC Public Health. 2025; 25:801. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-21996-x.
Dennison RA, Clune RJ, Tung J, et al. The public are receptive to risk-based innovations: A multi-methods exploration of anticipated acceptability and uptake of novel technologies for cancer early detection in symptomatic and asymptomatic scenarios. Frontiers in Cancer Control and Society. 2025;3:1522609. doi: 10.3389/fcacs.2025.1522609.