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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cancer

Date Submitted: Jul 21, 2021
Date Accepted: Jan 5, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Cruciferous Vegetable Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Cancer Recurrence in Non–Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Survivors: Development Using a Systematic Process

Yeary K, Clark N, Saad-Harfouche F, Erwin D, Kuliszewski M, Li Q, McCann S, Yu H, Lincourt C, Zoellner J, Tang L

Cruciferous Vegetable Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Cancer Recurrence in Non–Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Survivors: Development Using a Systematic Process

JMIR Cancer 2022;8(1):e32291

DOI: 10.2196/32291

PMID: 35166681

PMCID: 8889476

Cruciferous Vegetable Intervention to Prevent Cancer Recurrence in Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer Survivors: Development using a Systematic Process

  • Karen Yeary; 
  • Nikia Clark; 
  • Frances Saad-Harfouche; 
  • Deborah Erwin; 
  • Margaret Kuliszewski; 
  • Qiang Li; 
  • Susan McCann; 
  • Han Yu; 
  • Catherine Lincourt; 
  • Jamie Zoellner; 
  • Li Tang

ABSTRACT

Background:

Bladder cancer is one of the top 10 most common cancers in the US. Most bladder cancer (70-80%) is diagnosed at early stages as non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), which can be removed surgically. However, 50-80% of NMIBC recurs within 5 years, and 15-30% progresses with poor survival. Current treatment is limited and expensive. A wealth of preclinical and epidemiologic evidence suggests that dietary isothiocyanates (ITCs) in cruciferous vegetables (Cruciferae) could be a novel, non-invasive, and cost-effective strategy to control NMIBC recurrence and progression. Yet a scalable dietary intervention that increases ITC exposure through Cruciferae intake in NMIBC survivors has not been developed.

Objective:

This paper will describe a systematic process through which a dietary intervention for bladder cancer survivors was developed that can serve as a model for others who aim to develop evidence-based behavioral interventions for cancer prevention.

Methods:

We used a systematic process to adapt evidence-based dietary interventions into a Cruciferae intervention for NMIBC survivors. We 1) identified relevant factors, evidence-based behavioral techniques, and behavioral theory constructs used to increase cruciferae intake in NMIBC survivors; 2) used the PEN-3 model to review the intervention’s components (e.g. saliency of behavioral messages); 3) administered the revised intervention to community partners for their feedback; and 4) refined the intervention based on Step 3.

Results:

We developed a multi-component intervention for NMIBC survivors consisting of a magazine, tracking book, a live phone-call script, and interactive voice messages (IVR). Entitled “POW-R Health: Power to Redefine Your Health”, the intervention incorporated findings from our adaptation process to ensure saliency to NMIBC survivors.

Conclusions:

This is the first evidence-based, theoretically grounded dietary intervention developed to reduce bladder recurrence in NMIBC survivors using a systematic process for community adaptation. This study provides a model for others who aim to develop behavioral, community-relevant interventions for cancer prevention/control, with the overall goal of wide-scale implementation and dissemination.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Yeary K, Clark N, Saad-Harfouche F, Erwin D, Kuliszewski M, Li Q, McCann S, Yu H, Lincourt C, Zoellner J, Tang L

Cruciferous Vegetable Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Cancer Recurrence in Non–Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Survivors: Development Using a Systematic Process

JMIR Cancer 2022;8(1):e32291

DOI: 10.2196/32291

PMID: 35166681

PMCID: 8889476

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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.

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