Mortality rates for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have risen in the US over the past two decades, disproportionately impacting Black patients with chronic liver disease5,6. Black patients are 50% less likely than White patients to receive curative therapies for HCC even when presenting with early stage disease7,8. Reasons for disparities in mortality are in part related to failure to progress through the complex HCC care continuum to access curative therapies as a result of the unequal distribution of social and structural determinants of health (SSDOH)9,10. SSDOH are the social conditions that influence individual and group differences in health11. For example, investigators found that Black patients with early stage HCC were more likely than White patients to have ongoing alcohol and substance and as a result were not candidates for liver transplantation (LT)7. In addition, data from our prospective cohort study demonstrated that Black patients with HCC have a higher burden of poor SSDOH that than their White counterparts, including higher rates of poverty, educational achievement less than high school and lapses in subspecialty care. The downstream consequences of these inequities including poor health-related knowledge and social needs are being increasingly targeted for improvement by hospital systems and providers in cancer care. However, there are currently no interventions designed to target social determinants or downstream social needs and eliminate racial disparities in HCC care. Successful health disparities interventions have been culturally tailored and multi-level12. Therefore, an intervention that successfully reduces disparities in HCC outcomes should have these characteristics and address both patient- and system-level SSDOH. The HCC Liver-Link intervention investigators propose to develop is designed to: a) improve patients' HCC-related disease and treatment knowledge; b) screen patients for social needs and substance use and refer to social work for linkage to local services; and c) use our multidisciplinary HCC tumor board to facilitate linkage to subspecialty HCC cancer care. Earlier portions of this research project were devoted to developing the education program component of the HCC Liver-Link intervention. This intervention, a full multi-level intervention designed to address patient- and system-level SSDOH variables and facilitate access to curative HCC therapies (liver transplantation and resection) in a cohort of Black patients with Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer prognosis stage 0, A and downstaged B disease underwent pilot testing in a previous project. The aims of this portion of the study are to estimate the effect of the HCC Liver-Link intervention on the time to receipt of curative therapies and HCC related knowledge in black patients with HCC. Toward that end, investigators will conduct a multi-center, pilot randomized controlled trial to test the multi-level intervention in 40 black BCLC 0, A or downstaged B disease patients who will be followed for 6 months or until waitlisted for liver transplant.
Mortality rates for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have risen in the US over the past two decades, disproportionately impacting Black patients with chronic liver disease5,6. Black patients are 50% less likely than White patients to receive curative therapies for HCC even when presenting with early stage disease7,8. Reasons for disparities in mortality are in part related to failure to progress through the complex HCC care continuum to access curative therapies as a result of the unequal distribution of social and structural determinants of health (SSDOH)9,10. SSDOH are the social conditions that influence individual and group differences in health11. For example, investigators found that Black patients with early stage HCC were more likely than White patients to have ongoing alcohol and substance and as a result were not candidates for liver transplantation (LT)7. In addition, data from our prospective cohort study demonstrated that Black patients with HCC have a higher burden of poor SSDOH that than their White counterparts, including higher rates of poverty, educational achievement less than high school and lapses in subspecialty care. The downstream consequences of these inequities including poor health-related knowledge and social needs are being increasingly targeted for improvement by hospital systems and providers in cancer care. However, there are currently no interventions designed to target social determinants or downstream social needs and eliminate racial disparities in HCC care. Successful health disparities interventions have been culturally tailored and multi-level12. Therefore, an intervention that successfully reduces disparities in HCC outcomes should have these characteristics and address both patient- and system-level SSDOH. The HCC Liver-Link intervention investigators propose to develop is designed to: a) improve patients' HCC-related disease and treatment knowledge; b) screen patients for social needs and substance use and refer to social work for linkage to local services; and c) use our multidisciplinary HCC tumor board to facilitate linkage to subspecialty HCC cancer care. Earlier portions of this research project were devoted to developing the education program component of the HCC Liver-Link intervention. This intervention, a full multi-level intervention designed to address patient- and system-level SSDOH variables and facilitate access to curative HCC therapies (liver transplantation and resection) in a cohort of Black patients with Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer prognosis stage 0, A and downstaged B disease underwent pilot testing in a previous project. The aims of this portion of the study are to estimate the effect of the HCC Liver-Link intervention on the time to receipt of curative therapies and HCC related knowledge in black patients with HCC. Toward that end, investigators will conduct a multi-center, pilot randomized controlled trial to test the multi-level intervention in 40 black BCLC 0, A or downstaged B disease patients who will be followed for 6 months or until waitlisted for liver transplant.
Effect of the HCC Liver-Link Intervention
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Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, 46202
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.
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18 Years to 75 Years
ALL
No
Indiana University,
2026-01