School of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
School of Medicine, St. George's University of London, London, United Kingdom.
Cancer Control. 2021 Jan-Dec;28:10732748211024214. doi: 10.1177/10732748211024214.
The unprecedented threat of COVID-19 has taken its toll on the field of cancer research, with trial accrual rates seeing a sharp decline since the beginning of the pandemic. Recent evidence has suggested that decreased participation appears to be more pronounced in women than men, which raises concerns about an exacerbation of gender bias in research. The following manuscript is a commentary article to the recent study by Fox et al, who aimed at investigating the concerns of patients with regard to participating to cancer research, as well as examining potential gender disparities within their sample population. We provide a brief critique of their work, especially focusing on important limitations concerning sample size and under-representation of ethnic minority groups, before discussing their findings in light of current literature on gender differences in anxiety and risk perception, how this might be interpreted in the context of the current pandemic, and its impact on participation in cancer research. We present multiple lines of evidence which support the idea that women might experience greater anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic which could have a significant impact on cancer research participation and consequently the external validity of studies in the field. The first attempts to tackle these challenges have shown promise, but further research is required to perfect this process and target those groups who are at greatest need of intervention.
COVID-19 带来了前所未有的威胁,对癌症研究领域造成了影响,自疫情开始以来,试验入组率急剧下降。最近的证据表明,女性的参与度下降似乎比男性更为明显,这引发了人们对研究中性别偏见加剧的担忧。本文是对 Fox 等人最近研究的评论文章,旨在调查患者对参与癌症研究的担忧,并检查他们的样本人群中是否存在潜在的性别差异。我们对他们的工作进行了简要的批评,特别是关注样本量小和少数族裔代表性不足等重要限制,然后根据当前关于焦虑和风险感知性别差异的文献,以及这在当前大流行背景下的解释,以及它对癌症研究参与的影响,讨论他们的发现。我们提出了多条证据支持这样一种观点,即在 COVID-19 大流行期间,女性可能会感到更大的焦虑,这可能会对癌症研究的参与以及该领域研究的外部有效性产生重大影响。目前已经有一些尝试来应对这些挑战,并取得了一定的成果,但还需要进一步的研究来完善这一过程,并针对那些最需要干预的群体。