Division of Cancer Prevention and Population Sciences, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Cancer. 2014 Apr 1;120 Suppl 7(0 7):1113-21. doi: 10.1002/cncr.28571.
To ensure that National Institutes of Health-funded research is relevant to the population's needs, specific emphasis on proportional representation of minority/sex groups into National Cancer Institute (NCI) cancer centers' clinical research programs is reported to the NCI.
EMPaCT investigators at 5 regionally diverse comprehensive cancer centers compared data reported to the NCI for their most recent Cancer Center Support Grant competitive renewal to assess and compare the centers' catchment area designations, data definitions, data elements, collection processes, reporting, and performance regarding proportional representation of race/ethnicity and sex subsets.
Cancer centers' catchment area definitions differed widely in terms of their cancer patient versus general population specificity, levels of specificity, and geographic coverage. Racial/ethnic categories were similar, yet were defined differently, across institutions. Patients' socioeconomic status and insurance status were inconsistently captured across the 5 centers.
Catchment area definitions and the collection of patient-level demographic factors varied widely across the 5 comprehensive cancer centers. This challenged the assessment of success by cancer centers in accruing representative populations into the cancer research enterprise. Accrual of minorities was less than desired for at least 1 racial/ethnic subcategory at 4 of the 5 centers. Institutions should clearly and consistently declare their primary catchment area and the rationale and should report how race/ethnicity and sex are defined, determined, collected, and reported. More standardized, frequent, consistent collection, reporting, and review of these data are recommended, as is a commitment to collecting socioeconomic data, given that socioeconomic status is a primary driver of cancer disparities in the United States.
为确保美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助的研究与人群的需求相关,有报道称,NCI 特别强调少数民族/性别群体在 NCI 癌症中心临床研究计划中的代表性。
5 个区域多样化的综合癌症中心的 EMPaCT 调查人员将最近一次癌症中心支持拨款竞争更新向 NCI 报告的数据进行了比较,以评估和比较各中心的集水区指定、数据定义、数据元素、收集流程、报告以及在种族/族裔和性别亚组代表性方面的表现。
癌症中心的集水区定义在癌症患者与一般人群的特异性、特异性水平和地理覆盖范围方面存在很大差异。尽管机构之间的种族/族裔类别相似,但定义方式却不同。患者的社会经济地位和保险状况在 5 个中心之间不一致。
5 个综合癌症中心的集水区定义和患者水平人口统计因素的收集存在很大差异。这使得癌症中心评估在癌症研究事业中招募代表性人群的成功情况变得具有挑战性。在至少 4 个中心中,有 1 个种族/族裔亚组的少数民族患者入组数量未达到预期。各机构应明确和一致地宣布其主要集水区以及理由,并报告种族/族裔和性别是如何定义、确定、收集和报告的。建议更标准化、更频繁、更一致地收集、报告和审查这些数据,并承诺收集社会经济数据,因为社会经济地位是美国癌症差异的主要驱动因素。