Fayanju Oluwadamilola M, Ren Yi, Thomas Samantha M, Greenup Rachel A, Hyslop Terry, Hwang E Shelley, Stewart John H
Department of Surgery, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Women's Cancer Program, Duke Cancer Institute, Durham, NC, USA.
JNCI Cancer Spectr. 2019 Dec 16;4(2):pkz103. doi: 10.1093/jncics/pkz103. eCollection 2020 Apr.
Clinical trial participation among racial and ethnic minorities remains low despite national efforts. We sought to determine how participation in clinical trials by breast surgical oncology patients has changed over time and what characteristics are associated with participation.
Women with breast cancer enrolled in National Cancer Institute-sponsored, cooperative-group trials from 2000 to 2012 and who underwent oncologic surgery (n = 17 125) were compared with trial-eligible women in the National Cancer Database diagnosed in 2000-2012 (n = 792 719). Race-specific trial participation was plotted over time by income and reported as a proportion of the combined cohorts. Factors associated with trial participation were estimated using logistic regression; we report odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). A value less than .05 was considered statistically significant for all analyses. All tests were two-sided.
Participation declined across all groups over time because of a decrease in the scale and number of trials. In 2000-2003, Asian-Pacific Islander (7.17%), Hispanic (3.48%), and white (7.13%) patients from the highest income group had higher participation than their lower-income counterparts (Asian-Pacific Islander: 3.95%; Hispanic: 2.67%; white: 5.96%), but by 2008-2012, only high-income white patients participated more than lower-income whites (0.32% vs 0.25%, all < .01). Black (OR = 0.80, 95% CI = 0.75 to 0.85) and Hispanic (OR = 0.84, 95% CI = 0.77 to 0.92) patients were less likely to participate than whites, but there were statistically significant interactions between income and race and ethnicity, with high-income black patients being approximately 50% less likely to participate than lower-income blacks (all < .001).
Multifaceted interventions addressing the intersectionality of race, ethnicity, and other patient characteristics are needed to address persistent disparities in trial participation among breast surgical oncology patients.
尽管国家层面做出了努力,但种族和族裔少数群体参与临床试验的比例仍然很低。我们试图确定乳腺外科肿瘤患者参与临床试验的情况随时间发生了怎样的变化,以及哪些特征与参与情况相关。
将2000年至2012年参加美国国立癌症研究所资助的合作组试验并接受肿瘤手术的乳腺癌女性患者(n = 17125)与2000 - 2012年在国家癌症数据库中符合试验条件的女性患者(n = 792719)进行比较。按收入情况绘制特定种族的试验参与率随时间的变化图,并将其报告为合并队列的比例。使用逻辑回归估计与试验参与相关的因素;我们报告比值比(OR)及其95%置信区间(CI)。所有分析中,P值小于0.05被认为具有统计学意义。所有检验均为双侧检验。
由于试验规模和数量的减少,所有组的参与率随时间下降。在2000 - 2003年,来自最高收入组的亚太岛民(7.17%)、西班牙裔(3.48%)和白人(7.13%)患者的参与率高于低收入组的对应人群(亚太岛民:3.95%;西班牙裔:2.67%;白人:5.96%),但到2008 - 2012年,只有高收入白人患者的参与率高于低收入白人患者(0.32%对0.25%,P均<0.01)。黑人(OR = 0.80,95% CI = 0.75至0.85)和西班牙裔(OR = 0.84,95% CI = 0.77至0.92)患者参与试验的可能性低于白人,但收入与种族和族裔之间存在统计学上的显著交互作用,高收入黑人患者参与试验的可能性比低收入黑人患者低约50%(P均<0.001)。
需要采取多方面的干预措施来解决种族、族裔和其他患者特征的交叉问题,以消除乳腺外科肿瘤患者在试验参与方面持续存在的差异。