Division of Hematologic Malignancy and Cellular Therapeutics, University of Kansas Cancer Center, Kansas City, Kansas.
Department of Medicine, St. Mary's Medical Center, Huntington, West Virginia.
Transplant Cell Ther. 2022 Jul;28(7):358-364. doi: 10.1016/j.jtct.2022.04.008. Epub 2022 Apr 13.
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is changing the paradigm in hematologic malignancies, but disparities in access exist in the real-world setting. Efforts to address and eliminate these disparities will ensure availability of this life-saving therapy. This study aimed to determine patterns of racial/ethnic distribution, socioeconomic strata, insurance coverage, and travel time of CAR T cell recipients. We used the Vizient Clinical Database (CDB) to capture and analyze elective encounters for CAR T administration as well as encounters for any reason other than CAR T administration (non-CAR T) in patients with lymphoma, myeloma, and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Travel time and median household income were calculated based on ZIP code of residence. We found that African Americans (AA) were less likely than other racial/ethnic groups to receive CAR T cell therapy. In addition, AA and Hispanic participants were underrepresented in clinical trials. Among the patients with myeloma, all of whom received CAR T cell therapy on a clinical trial, only 1% were African American and 5.4% were Hispanic, and only 7.3% of CAR T cell therapy-related admissions were of patients from neighborhoods with a mean income <$40,000. Almost one-third of the CAR T cell recipients lived >2 hours away from the center in which they were treated; the majority of these patients were from the higher socioeconomic stratum (P < .001). There were fewer patients with Medicare and uninsured patients in the CAR T cell group. Our data indicate that socioeconomic stratum and insurance coverage are important underlying determinants of the identified disparities. Low clinical trial enrollment of minorities also feeds the inequity. Strategies to improve access need to be framed around addressing the causes for the observed disparities.
嵌合抗原受体 (CAR) T 细胞疗法正在改变血液系统恶性肿瘤的治疗模式,但在实际应用中存在获得机会的差异。为了解决和消除这些差异,需要确保这种救命疗法的可及性。本研究旨在确定 CAR T 细胞受体患者的种族/民族分布、社会经济阶层、保险覆盖范围和旅行时间模式。我们使用 Vizient 临床数据库 (CDB) 来捕获和分析 CAR T 给药的选择性就诊情况,以及除 CAR T 给药之外的任何原因的就诊情况(非 CAR T),这些患者患有淋巴瘤、骨髓瘤和急性淋巴细胞白血病。根据居住邮政编码计算旅行时间和中位数家庭收入。我们发现,非裔美国人(AA)接受 CAR T 细胞疗法的可能性低于其他种族/民族群体。此外,非裔美国人和西班牙裔参与者在临床试验中的代表性不足。在接受 CAR T 细胞治疗的所有骨髓瘤患者中,只有 1%是非裔美国人,5.4%是西班牙裔,只有 7.3%的 CAR T 细胞治疗相关入院是来自收入中位数<$40,000 美元的社区的患者。近三分之一的 CAR T 细胞受体患者距离接受治疗的中心超过 2 小时;这些患者大多数来自较高的社会经济阶层(P<.001)。CAR T 细胞组中 Medicare 和无保险患者较少。我们的数据表明,社会经济阶层和保险覆盖范围是确定差异的重要潜在决定因素。少数族裔临床试验参与率低也加剧了这种不平等。需要制定改善获得机会的策略,以解决观察到的差异的原因。