Raz Limor, Miller Virginia M
Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Handb Exp Pharmacol. 2012(214):127-47. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-30726-3_7.
Women continue to be underrepresented in clinical trials, particularly in Phases I and II of experimental drug studies in spite of legislative guidelines in the USA, Canada, the European Union, Australia, and Japan requiring the inclusion of women in clinical trials. As such, women remain a vulnerable population subject to the adverse effects of pharmacological therapies. Thus, women experience higher rates of adverse drug reactions than do men and for women of reproductive age or who may be pregnant, therapeutic options may be limited. This chapter provides a brief history of inclusion of sex and gender as variables in clinical trials, summarizes governmental legislation for consideration of sex and gender in clinical trials and provides specific examples of drugs which have been withdrawn from the market because of side effects in women. Additional information related to sex and gender in preclinical testing, trial design, challenges to recruitment of women for clinical trials and statistical methods for analysis of data also is considered.
尽管美国、加拿大、欧盟、澳大利亚和日本都有立法指南要求在临床试验中纳入女性,但在临床试验中,尤其是在实验性药物研究的I期和II期,女性的代表性仍然不足。因此,女性仍然是易受药物治疗不良反应影响的弱势群体。因此,女性发生药物不良反应的比率高于男性,对于育龄期或可能怀孕的女性来说,治疗选择可能有限。本章简要介绍了将性别作为临床试验变量纳入研究的历史,总结了政府关于在临床试验中考虑性别的立法,并提供了因对女性有副作用而退出市场的药物的具体例子。还考虑了与临床前测试、试验设计中的性别、招募女性参与临床试验的挑战以及数据分析的统计方法相关的其他信息。