Despite notable progress in early detection, prevention, and treatment of prostate cancer within the United States, racial disparities are present very early in the patient journey of Black men, starting with the shared decision-making process. The disproportionately higher number of Black men diagnosed with prostate cancer also suggests that Black men must also contend with the management of associated physiological and psychosocial symptoms. The survivorship care plan was designed to communicate critical information that cancer survivors and their health care advocates need as a guidebook for long term post treatment care, and improved survivorship. An associated systematic literature review conducted by our multidisciplinary investigative team revealed there was a severe underutilization of survivorship care plans within cancer survivorship care especially with Black men. The considerable lack of utilization and/or tailoring of survivorship care plans may be a significant contributor to the worsening of health disparities in this population. Co-designing survivorship care plans with key stakeholders, specifically Black survivors and their health care advocates, is imperative to ensure that the plan meets the needs and preferences that Black men have for survivorship care. This presentation will discuss the steps the investigative team used to address the disparities in shared decision-making, and the subsequent underutilization of survivorship care plans. The investigative team utilized semi-structured interviews and focus group methodology to explore how the lived experiences of Black male prostate cancer survivors are incorporated and addressed in the construction and contents of a culturally tailored survivorship care plan (CaP_SCP- Black Men). An evaluability assessment was conducted to determine whether implementation of the newly created survivorship care plan is feasible, appropriate, and addresses the specific needs of the population before full implementation. This presentation will discuss how this combination of approaches allowed the investigative team to understand how survivorship care plans affect the unique complexities of survivorship in Black men, and allows for the feasibility study of  the implementation of a culturally relevant survivorship care plan (CaP_SCP- Black Men) in a population that bears the greatest burden nationally and globally.    

Citation Format: Timethia Bonner, Kimlin Ashing, Folakemi Odedina. The iCCARE Consortium for Prostate Cancer in Black men: Evaluability assessment of the implementation of a care plan for black prostate cancer survivors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 16th AACR Conference on the Science of Cancer Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; 2023 Sep 29-Oct 2;Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2023;32(12 Suppl):Abstract nr A041.