Brewster Ryan C L, Steinberg Jecca R, Magnani Christopher J, Jackson Jasmyne, Wong Bonnie O, Valikodath Nishma, MacDonald Justin, Li Anna, Marsland Paula, Goodman Steven N, Schroeder Alan, Turner Brandon
Department of General Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of General Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Pediatrics. 2023 Apr 1;151(4). doi: 10.1542/peds.2022-058552.
Representative enrollment of racial and ethnic minoritized populations in biomedical research ensures the generalizability of results and equitable access to novel therapies. Previous studies on pediatric clinical trial diversity are limited to subsets of journals or disciplines. We aimed to evaluate race and ethnicity reporting and representation in all US pediatric clinical trials on ClinicalTrials.gov.
We performed a cross-sectional study of US-based clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov that enrolled participants aged <18 years old between October 2007 and March 2020. We used descriptive statistics, compound annual growth rates, and multivariable logistic regression for data analysis. Estimates of US population statistics and disease burden were calculated with the US Census, Kids' Inpatient Database, and National Survey of Children's Health.
Among 1183 trials encompassing 405 376 participants, race and ethnicity reporting significantly increased from 27% in 2007 to 87% in 2018 (P < .001). The median proportional enrollment of Asian American children was 0.6% (interquartile range [IQR], 0%-3.7%); American Indian, 0% (IQR, 0%-0%); Black, 12% (IQR, 2.9%-28.4%); Hispanic, 7.1% (IQR, 0%-18.6%); and white 66.4% (IQR, 41.5%-81.6%). Asian American, Black, and Hispanic participants were underrepresented relative to US population demographics. Compared with expected proportions based on disease prevalence and hospitalizations, Asian American and Hispanic participants were most consistently underrepresented across diagnoses.
While race and ethnicity reporting in pediatric clinical trials has improved, the representative enrollment of minoritized participants remains an ongoing challenge. Evidence-based and policy solutions are needed to address these disparities to advance biomedical innovation for all children.
在生物医学研究中对种族和族裔少数群体进行代表性招募,可确保研究结果具有广泛适用性,并能公平获得新疗法。先前关于儿科临床试验多样性的研究仅限于部分期刊或学科。我们旨在评估ClinicalTrials.gov上所有美国儿科临床试验中的种族和族裔报告情况及代表性。
我们对2007年10月至2020年3月在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册的、招募18岁以下参与者的美国临床试验进行了横断面研究。我们使用描述性统计、复合年增长率和多变量逻辑回归进行数据分析。美国人口统计数据和疾病负担的估计值是通过美国人口普查、儿童住院数据库和全国儿童健康调查计算得出的。
在涵盖405376名参与者的1183项试验中,种族和族裔报告率从2007年的27%显著增至2018年的87%(P<.001)。亚裔美国儿童的中位比例招募率为0.6%(四分位间距[IQR],0%-3.7%);美洲印第安人,0%(IQR,0%-0%);黑人,12%(IQR,2.9%-28.4%);西班牙裔,7.1%(IQR,0%-18.6%);白人,66.4%(IQR,41.5%-81.6%)。相对于美国人口统计数据,亚裔美国、黑人和西班牙裔参与者的代表性不足。与基于疾病患病率和住院情况的预期比例相比,亚裔美国和西班牙裔参与者在所有诊断中的代表性最持续不足。
虽然儿科临床试验中的种族和族裔报告情况有所改善,但少数群体参与者的代表性招募仍然是一个持续存在的挑战。需要基于证据的政策解决方案来解决这些差异,以推动所有儿童的生物医学创新。