Olson Nancy L, Albensi Benedict C
Division of Neurodegenerative Disorders, St Boniface Hospital Albrechtsen Research Centre, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Department of Pharmacology & Therapeutics, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
J Alzheimers Dis Rep. 2020 Aug 14;4(1):325-344. doi: 10.3233/ADR-200214.
Randomized clinical trials (RCT) involve labor-intensive, highly regulated, and controlled processes intended to transform scientific concepts into clinical outcomes. To be effective and targeted, it is imperative they include those populations who would most benefit from those outcomes. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is most detrimental to the aging population, and its clinical manifestation is influenced by socio-economic factors such as poverty, poor education, stress, and chronic co-morbidities. Indigenous populations in the United States and Canada are among the minority populations most influenced by poor socio-economic conditions and are prone to the ravages of AD, with Indigenous women carrying the added burden of exposure to violence, caregiving stresses, and increased risk by virtue of their sex. Race- and sex-based disparities in RCT enrollment has occurred for decades, with Indigenous men and women very poorly represented. In this review, we examined literature from the last twenty years that reinforce these disparities and provide some concrete suggestions and guidelines to increase the enrollment numbers in AD RCT among this vulnerable and poorly represented population.
随机临床试验(RCT)涉及劳动密集型、高度规范且受控制的过程,旨在将科学概念转化为临床结果。为了有效且有针对性,它们必须纳入那些将从这些结果中获益最大的人群。阿尔茨海默病(AD)对老年人群危害最大,其临床表现受贫困、教育程度低、压力和慢性合并症等社会经济因素影响。美国和加拿大的原住民是受不良社会经济状况影响最大的少数群体之一,容易受到AD的侵害,原住民女性还承受着暴力暴露、护理压力以及因其性别而增加的风险等额外负担。几十年来,RCT入组中一直存在基于种族和性别的差异,原住民男性和女性的代表性极低。在本综述中,我们研究了过去二十年的文献,这些文献强化了这些差异,并提供了一些具体建议和指导方针,以增加这一脆弱且代表性不足人群在AD RCT中的入组人数。