Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology and Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Family, Community, and Health Systems, University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Nursing, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Cancer. 2022 Nov 15;128(22):3977-3984. doi: 10.1002/cncr.34455. Epub 2022 Sep 16.
Clinical trials offer novel treatments, which are essential to high quality cancer care. Patients living in rural areas are often underrepresented in clinical trials due to several factors. This study evaluated the association between rurality and interest in clinical trial participation, change in interest, and treatment decision-making style preference.
This cohort study included patients with cancer receiving oncology care at the University of Alabama at Birmingham from 2017 to 2019. Associations between treatment decision-making preference and the interaction between rurality and area deprivation were analyzed using multinomial logistic regression. Initial interest in clinical trial participation and change in interest were analyzed using modified Poisson regressions with robust standard errors. Initial interest model was stratified by Area Deprivation Index (ADI; higher vs. lower disadvantaged).
In adjusted models, patients in rural versus urban areas had similar initial interest in clinical trials, both those in higher (40% vs. 50%) and lower disadvantaged settings (54% vs. 62%). Additionally, rural versus urban patients had similar change of clinical trial interest for both those who changed from uninterested-to-interested (31% vs. 26%) and interested-to-uninterested (47% vs. 42%).
This study compares the interest in clinical trial participation among patients living in rural and urban settings. Lack of interest may be secondary to barriers that patients in rural areas face (e.g., transportation, financial, access). Most rural patients prefer a shared treatment decision-making style, which should be considered when identifying interventions to increase enrollment of underserved rural patients in clinical trials.
临床试验提供了新的治疗方法,这对高质量的癌症护理至关重要。由于多种因素,居住在农村地区的患者在临床试验中的代表性往往不足。本研究评估了农村地区与临床试验参与意愿、意愿变化和治疗决策风格偏好之间的关系。
本队列研究纳入了 2017 年至 2019 年期间在阿拉巴马大学伯明翰分校接受肿瘤治疗的癌症患者。使用多项逻辑回归分析了治疗决策偏好与农村与地区贫困程度之间的相互作用的相关性。使用具有稳健标准差的修正泊松回归分析了初始临床试验参与意愿和意愿变化。初始兴趣模型按区域贫困指数(ADI;较高与较低不利)分层。
在调整后的模型中,农村地区与城市地区的患者对临床试验的初始兴趣相似,无论是在 ADI 较高(40%比 50%)还是 ADI 较低(54%比 62%)的地区。此外,农村与城市地区的患者对临床试验的兴趣变化也相似,无论是对从未感兴趣转变为感兴趣的患者(31%比 26%)还是对感兴趣转变为不感兴趣的患者(47%比 42%)。
本研究比较了居住在农村和城市地区的患者对临床试验参与的兴趣。缺乏兴趣可能是农村地区患者面临的障碍(例如,交通、财务、获取)造成的。大多数农村患者更喜欢共同的治疗决策风格,在确定增加参与临床试验的服务不足的农村患者的干预措施时应考虑这一点。