Work Description

Title: MiGHT Baseline Survey Data Open Access Deposited

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Attribute Value
Methodology
  • The data is from a survey that participants completed on a web-based portal. Instrument and/or Software specifications: Files are csv
Description
  • Participant-reported results from the MiGHT study Baseline Survey, including knowledge, motivators, and barriers for hereditary cancer genetic testing uptake. This is raw dataset is saved in comma separated value (.csv) format.
Creator
Creator ORCID iD
Depositor
Depositor creator
  • true
Contact information
Discipline
Funding agency
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH)
ORSP grant number
  • F057530
Keyword
Date coverage
  • 2023-05 to 2024-10
Resource type
Last modified
  • 06/04/2025
Published
  • 06/04/2025
Language
DOI
  • https://doi.org/10.7302/0tqr-dn38
License
To Cite this Work:
Delacroix, E., Austin, S., Bacon, E., Rice, J., Hanson, E. N., Stoffel, E. M., Roberts, S., Ulhmann, W., Griggs, J. J., Koeppe, E., Resnicow, K. (2025). MiGHT Baseline Survey Data [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/0tqr-dn38

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Files (Count: 5; Size: 2.45 MB)

Date: 10 March 2025

Dataset Title: MiGHT Baseline Survey Data

Dataset Creators: Delacroix,E.; Austin, S.

Dataset Contact: MiGHT Study Team: [email protected]

Funding: National Institutues of Health (NIH) U-01 Grant

Key Points:
- Survey responses of adults, at increased risk of hereditary cancer, regarding views on barriers and motivators to hereditary genetic testing uptake.

Research Overview:
As part of recruitment for MiGHT, a large clinical trial evaluating interventions to promote uptake of genetic testing for cancer susceptibility, adults were invited to complete a family health history survey tool eliciting detailed family history of cancer diagnoses in first- and second-degree relatives. Sites of subject recruitment included community oncology practices in the state of Michigan, cancer registries, oncology, gastroenterology, and primary care clinics at an academic medical center, community health fairs, and radio and newspaper advertisements.

Methodology:
As part of recruitment for MiGHT, a large clinical trial evaluating interventions to promote uptake of genetic testing for cancer susceptibility, adults were invited to complete a family health history survey tool eliciting detailed family history of cancer diagnoses in first- and second-degree relatives. Sites of subject recruitment included community oncology practices in the state of Michigan, cancer registries, oncology, gastroenterology, and primary care clinics at an academic medical center, community health fairs, and radio and newspaper advertisements. Regardless of sex assigned at birth, all participants were shown all cancer types (bladder, breast, cervical, colorectal, endometrial, lung, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, and ten others) and patients could report multiple primary cancers.

The University of Michigan Medical School Institutional Review Board approved this research (HUM00180616, HUM00217689, HUM00231415). MiGHT is registered with clinical trials.gov (NCT05162846).

Individuals whose personal and/or family cancer histories met clinical guidelines-based criteria for genetic testing (GT) (n=3001) received an email invitation from the study team with a unique link to complete a brief survey to assess eligibility for the clinical trial. Individuals who had already completed GT (n=932), or had an GT appointment scheduled (n=64), or did not have access to a phone or internet (n=155), were under age 18 (n=1), did not communicate in English (n=7), or were deceased (n=15) were excluded and 832 individuals completed informed consent for the trial.

Consented subjects (n=832) were asked to complete a baseline survey which included questions about hereditary GT knowledge, receipt of clinician recommendations about GT, and motivators and barriers to genetic testing uptake. Reminder emails to complete baseline were sent 1-day, 3-days, 5-days, and 10-days, following consent. Initially up-to eight, later five, reminder phone calls were made one to three times each week for four weeks.

We examined factors associated with receipt of a clinician recommendation for cancer genetic testing (assessed by self-report) and used Multivariable logistic regression to assess the association of demographic factors, cancer diagnoses and receipt of clinician recommendation for cancer GT.

Data was analyzed using R and SPSS v.29.

Files contained here:
Raw data file
-might_baseline_processed_data2025-02-24.csv

Survey Questions and Response Options
-Baseline_Codebook.docx

Consent form
-Ame00148625_-_MiGHT_consent-Clean_-_2024.07.15.pdf

Related publication(s):
None published

Use and Access:
This data set is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC 4.0).

To Cite Data:
Delacroix, E., Austin, S., Bacon, E., Rice, J., Hanson, E. N., Stoffel, E. M., Roberts, S., Ulhmann, W., Griggs, J. J., Resnicow, K. MiGHT Baseline Survey Data [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/0tqr-dn38

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