Eileen P. Dimond
Science Applications International Corporation
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Featured researches published by Eileen P. Dimond.
Cancer | 2014
Aisha T. Langford; Ken Resnicow; Eileen P. Dimond; Andrea Denicoff; Diane St. Germain; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Rebecca A. Enos; Angela Carrigan; Kathy Wilkinson; Ronald S. Go
This study examined racial/ethnic differences among patients in clinical trial (CT) enrollment, refusal rates, ineligibility, and desire to participate in research within the National Cancer Institutes Community Cancer Centers Program (NCCCP) Clinical Trial Screening and Accrual Log.
Journal of Oncology Practice | 2014
Diane St Germain; Andrea M. Denicoff; Eileen P. Dimond; Angela Carrigan; Rebecca A. Enos; Maria M. Gonzalez; Kathy Wilkinson; Michelle A. Mathiason; Brenda Duggan; Shaun Einolf; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Donna M. Bryant; Michael A. Thompson; Stephen S. Grubbs; Ronald S. Go
PURPOSE Screening logs have the potential to help oncology clinical trial programs at the site level, as well as trial leaders, address enrollment in real time. Such an approach could be especially helpful in improving representation of racial/ethnic minority and other underrepresented populations in clinical trials. METHODS The National Cancer Institute Community Cancer Centers Program (NCCCP) developed a screening log. Log data collected from March 2009 through May 2012 were analyzed for number of patients screened versus enrolled, including for demographic subgroups; screening methods; and enrollment barriers, including reasons for ineligibility and provider and patient reasons for declining to offer or participate in a trial. User feedback was obtained to better understand perceptions of log utility. RESULTS Of 4,483 patients screened, 18.4% enrolled onto NCCCP log trials. Reasons for nonenrollment were ineligibility (51.6%), patient declined (25.8%), physician declined (15.6%), urgent need for treatment (6.6%), and trial suspension (0.4%). Major reasons for patients declining were no desire to participate in trials (43.2%) and preference for standard of care (39%). Major reasons for physicians declining to offer trials were preference for standard of care (53%) and concerns about tolerability (29.3%). Enrollment rates onto log trials did not differ between white and black (P = .15) or between Hispanic and non-Hispanic patients (P = .73). Other races had lower enrollment rates than whites and blacks. Sites valued the ready access to log data on enrollment barriers, with some sites changing practices to address those barriers. CONCLUSION Use of screening logs to document enrollment barriers at the local level can facilitate development of strategies to enhance clinical trial accrual.
Journal of Oncology Practice | 2016
Eileen P. Dimond; Robin Zon; Bryan J. Weiner; Diane St. Germain; Andrea Denicoff; Kandie Dempsey; Angela Carrigan; Randall Teal; Marjorie J. Good; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Stephen S. Grubbs
PURPOSE Several publications have described minimum standards and exemplary attributes for clinical trial sites to improve research quality. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) Community Cancer Centers Program (NCCCP) developed the clinical trial Best Practice Matrix tool to facilitate research program improvements through annual self-assessments and benchmarking. The tool identified nine attributes, each with three progressive levels, to score clinical trial infrastructural elements from less to more exemplary. The NCCCP sites correlated tool use with research program improvements, and the NCI pursued a formative evaluation to refine the interpretability and measurability of the tool. METHODS From 2011 to 2013, 21 NCCCP sites self-assessed their programs with the tool annually. During 2013 to 2014, NCI collaborators conducted a five-step formative evaluation of the matrix tool. RESULTS Sites reported significant increases in level-three scores across the original nine attributes combined (P<.001). Two specific attributes exhibited significant change: clinical trial portfolio diversity and management (P=.0228) and clinical trial communication (P=.0281). The formative evaluation led to revisions, including renaming the Best Practice Matrix as the Clinical Trial Assessment of Infrastructure Matrix (CT AIM), expanding infrastructural attributes from nine to 11, clarifying metrics, and developing a new scoring tool. CONCLUSION Broad community input, cognitive interviews, and pilot testing improved the usability and functionality of the tool. Research programs are encouraged to use the CT AIM to assess and improve site infrastructure. Experience within the NCCCP suggests that the CT AIM is useful for improving quality, benchmarking research performance, reporting progress, and communicating program needs with institutional leaders. The tool model may also be useful in disciplines beyond oncology.
Journal of Oncology Practice | 2013
Howard Zaren; Suresh G. Nair Md; Ronald S. Go; Rebecca A. Enos; Keith S Lanier; Michael A. Thompson; Jinxiu Zhao; Deborah L. Fleming; John C Leighton; Thomas Edward Gribbin; Donna M. Bryant; Angela Carrigan; Jennifer C. Corpening; Kimberly A. Csapo; Eileen P. Dimond; Christie Ellison; Maria M. Gonzalez; Jodi L. Harr; Kathy Wilkinson; Andrea M. Denicoff
Oncology Issues | 2014
Diane St. Germain; Eileen P. Dimond; Kristi Olesen; Christie Ellison; Lianne Nacpil; Lucy Gansauer; Angela Carrigan; Kathleen Igo; Maria Gonzalez
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Eileen P. Dimond; Robin Zon; Diane St. Germain; Andrea Denicoff; Angela Carrigan; Kandie Dempsey; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Maria Gonzalez; Mitchell Berger; Lucy Gansauer; James D. Bearden; Kathy Wilkinson; Donna M. Bryant; Maria C. Bell; Beth I. LaVasseur; Phil Stella; Marjorie J. Good; Kathleen Igo; Octavio Quiñones; Stephen S. Grubbs
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014
Bryan J. Weiner; Randall Teal; Eileen P. Dimond; Marjorie J. Good; Angela Carrigan; Diane St. Germain; Andrea Denicoff; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Kandie Dempsey; Robin Zon; Stephen S. Grubbs
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018
Kelly A. Benante; Yanfei Xu; Mary Beth Tull; Adrian J. Segura; Katrina M. Alber; Kiril Kalinichenko; Lifang Hou; Borko Jovanovic; Marjorie Perloff; Brandy M. Heckman-Stoddard; Eileen P. Dimond; Seema A. Khan
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Donna M. O'Brien; Mary Anne Bright; Steven B. Clauser; Mary L. Fennell; Jay K. Harness; Deborah D. Hood; Maureen R. Johnson; Nora Katurakes; Worta McCaskill-Stevens; Jane G. Zapka; Brenda A. Adjei; Kathleen Castro; Eileen P. Dimond; Diane St. Germain; Sanya Springfield
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012
Ronald S. Go; Howard Zaren; Suresh Nair; Keith S. Lanier; Michael Thompson; Rebecca A. Enos; Jinxiu Zhao; Deborah L. Fleming; John Leighton; Thomas Edward Gribbin; Donna M. Bryant; Angela Carrigan; Jennifer C. Corpening; Kimberly A. Csapo; Eileen P. Dimond; Christie Ellison; Maria Gonzalez; Jodi L. Harr; Kathy Wilkinson; Andrea Denicoff