Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford Medicine, Stanford, California.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Health Forum. 2024 Jun 7;5(6):e241388. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2024.1388.
The five 1997 Office of Management and Budget races in the US include American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White, with Hispanic ethnicity. Despite the Affordable Care Act mandating Office of Management and Budget-based collecting and reporting standards, race and ethnicity publishing in medical journals is inconsistent, despite being necessary to achieve health equity.
To quantify race and ethnicity reporting rates and calculate representation quotients (RQs) in published oncology clinical trials.
In this systematic review, PubMed and Embase were queried for phase 2/3 clinical trials of the 6 most common noncutaneous solid cancers, published between January 1, 2012, and December 31, 2022, in 4 high-impact journals. Trial characteristics were recorded. The RQs for each race and ethnicity were calculated by dividing the percent of representation in each clinical trial publication by the percent of year-matched, site-specific incident cancers in the US, compared with Kruskal-Wallis tests with Bonferroni correction (BC). Reporting was compared between journal publications and ClinicalTrials.gov.
Among 1202 publications evaluated, 364 met inclusion criteria: 16 JAMA, 241 Journal of Clinical Oncology, 19 Lancet, and 88 New England Journal of Medicine. Publications included 268 209 patients (171 132 women [64%]), with a median of 356 (IQR, 131-800) patients per publication. Reported race and ethnicity included American Indian or Alaska Native in 52 (14%) publications, Asian in 196 (54%), Black or African American in 215 (59%), Hispanic in 67 (18%), Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander in 28 (8%), and White in 254 (70%). Median RQ varied across race (P < .001 BC), with 1.04 (IQR, 0.09-4.77) for Asian, 0.98 (IQR, 0.86-1.06) for White, 0.42 (IQR, 0.12-0.75) for Black or African American, and 0.00 (IQR, 0.00-0.00) for both American Indian or Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander patients. Sensitivity analyses showed similar findings on subset analysis for US-only clinical trials. There was significantly less race and ethnicity reporting in the clinical trial publications compared with ClinicalTrials.gov documentation for American Indian or Alaska Native (14% vs 45%; P < .001 per McNemar χ2 test with continuity correction [MC]) and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (8% vs 43%; P < .001 MC).
While most phase 2/3 oncology clinical trials published in high-impact journals report race and ethnicity, most did not report American Indian or Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander racial categories. Our findings support a call to action for consistent journal policies and transparent race and ethnicity reporting, in alignment with Affordable Care Act-concordant race and ethnicity federal reporting requirements.
美国 1997 年管理和预算办公室的五个种族包括美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民、亚裔、非裔美国人、夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民以及白种人,同时还有西班牙裔。尽管《平价医疗法案》要求管理和预算办公室基于收集和报告标准,但医学期刊上的种族和族裔出版仍不一致,尽管这是实现健康公平所必需的。
量化肿瘤学临床研究中种族和族裔报告率,并计算代表率(RQ)。
在这项系统评价中,在 PubMed 和 Embase 中查询了 2012 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 12 月 31 日期间发表的最常见的 6 种非皮肤实体癌的 2/3 期临床试验,发表在 4 种高影响力期刊上。记录了试验特征。通过将每个临床试验出版物中的代表性百分比除以美国同年特定部位癌症的发生率(用 Kruskal-Wallis 检验与 Bonferroni 校正[BC]进行比较)来计算每个种族和族裔的 RQ。比较了期刊出版物和 ClinicalTrials.gov 之间的报告情况。
在评估的 1202 篇出版物中,有 364 篇符合纳入标准:16 篇《美国医学会杂志》、241 篇《临床肿瘤学杂志》、19 篇《柳叶刀》和 88 篇《新英格兰医学杂志》。这些出版物包括 268009 名患者(171132 名女性[64%]),每篇出版物的中位数为 356 名(IQR,131-800)患者。报告的种族和族裔包括 52 篇(14%)出版物中的美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民、196 篇(54%)出版物中的亚裔、215 篇(59%)出版物中的非裔美国人、67 篇(18%)出版物中的西班牙裔、28 篇(8%)出版物中的夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民和 254 篇(70%)出版物中的白人。跨种族的中位数 RQ 存在差异(P < .001 BC),亚裔为 1.04(IQR,0.09-4.77),白人为 0.98(IQR,0.86-1.06),非裔美国人为 0.42(IQR,0.12-0.75),美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民和夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民患者的 RQ 为 0.00(IQR,0.00-0.00)。亚组分析显示,美国仅有的临床试验的敏感性分析也得出了类似的发现。与 ClinicalTrials.gov 文档相比,临床研究出版物中报告的种族和族裔明显较少,美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民(14%比 45%;P < .001 每 Mcnemar χ2 检验与连续性校正[MC])和夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民(8%比 43%;P < .001 MC)。
虽然大多数发表在高影响力期刊上的 2/3 期肿瘤学临床研究报告了种族和族裔,但大多数研究没有报告美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民和夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民的种族类别。我们的研究结果支持呼吁采取一致的期刊政策和透明的种族和族裔报告,以符合《平价医疗法案》一致的联邦种族和族裔报告要求。