Risk Communication Laboratory, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Temple University College of Public Health, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Fox Chase Cancer Center, Risk Assessment Program, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2020 Sep;34(9):399-416. doi: 10.1089/apc.2020.0008.
HIV disproportionately impacts US racial and ethnic minorities but they participate in treatment and vaccine clinical trials at a lower rate than whites. To summarize barriers and facilitators to this participation we conducted a scoping review of the literature guided by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies published from January 2007 and September 2019 were reviewed. Thirty-one articles were identified from an initial pool of 325 records using three coders. All records were then assessed for barriers and facilitators and summarized. Results indicate that while racial and ethnic minority participation in these trials has increased over the past 10 years, rates still do not proportionately reflect their burden of HIV infection. While many of the barriers mirror those found in other disease clinical trials (e.g., cancer), HIV stigma is a unique and important barrier to participating in HIV clinical trials. Recommendations to improve recruitment and retention of racial and ethnic minorities include training health care providers on the importance of recruiting diverse participants, creating interdisciplinary research teams that better represent who is being recruited, and providing culturally competent trial designs. Despite the knowledge of how to better recruit racial and ethnic minorities, few interventions have been documented using these strategies. Based on the findings of this review, we recommend that future clinical trials engage community stakeholders in all stages of the research process through community-based participatory research approaches and promote culturally and linguistically appropriate recruitment and retention strategies for marginalized populations overly impacted by HIV.
HIV 在美国的不同种族和族裔群体中不成比例地流行,但他们参与治疗和疫苗临床试验的比例低于白人。为了总结参与这些临床试验的障碍和促进因素,我们在 PRISMA 指南的指导下对文献进行了范围综述。审查了 2007 年 1 月至 2019 年 9 月发表的研究。使用三名编码员从最初的 325 份记录中确定了 31 篇文章。然后对所有记录进行了障碍和促进因素的评估和总结。结果表明,尽管过去 10 年来,这些试验中少数族裔和少数民族的参与率有所增加,但比例仍未反映他们感染 HIV 的负担。虽然许多障碍与其他疾病临床试验中发现的障碍相似(例如癌症),但 HIV 耻辱感是参与 HIV 临床试验的一个独特且重要的障碍。为了提高少数族裔和少数民族的招募和保留率,建议对医疗保健提供者进行培训,使其了解招募多样化参与者的重要性,建立更好地代表招募人员的跨学科研究团队,并提供具有文化能力的试验设计。尽管了解了如何更好地招募少数族裔和少数民族,但很少有干预措施使用这些策略进行记录。基于这篇综述的结果,我们建议未来的临床试验通过基于社区的参与式研究方法让社区利益相关者参与研究过程的所有阶段,并为受 HIV 过度影响的边缘化人群推广文化和语言适宜的招募和保留策略。