Determinants of first-line clinical trial enrollment among Black and White gynecologic cancer patients.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Cancer Causes & Control Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-03 DOI:10.1007/s10552-025-01963-y
Autumn B Carey, Caitlin E Meade, Britton Trabert, Casey M Cosgrove, Ashley S Felix
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Disparities in gynecologic cancer clinical trial enrollment exist between Black and White patients; however, few examine racial differences in clinical trial enrollment predictors. We examined whether first-line clinical trial enrollment determinants differed between Black and White gynecologic cancer patients.

Methods: We used the National Cancer Database to identify Black and White gynecologic cancer (cervix, ovarian, uterine) patients diagnosed in 2014-2020. Multivariable logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for associations between clinical trial enrollment (yes vs no) and sociodemographic, facility, tumor, and treatment characteristics stratified by race. We included a multiplicative interaction term between each assessed predictor and race to test whether associations differed by race.

Results: We included 703,022 gynecologic cancer patients (mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 60.9 [13.1] years). Clinical trial enrollment was lower among Black (49/86,058, 0.06%) vs. White patients (710/616,964, 0.11%). Only cancer site differed by race: among Black patients, a cervical vs. uterine cancer diagnosis (OR = 4.63, 95% CI = 1.67-12.88) was associated with higher clinical trial enrollment odds, while among White patients, both cervical (OR = 2.21, 95% CI = 1.48-3.29) and ovarian (OR = 3.40, 95% CI = 2.58-4.47) cancer diagnoses (vs. uterine cancer) were associated with higher enrollment odds. Most predictors were associated with clinical trial enrollment odds among White but not Black patients.

Conclusion: Few differences in first-line clinical trial enrollment predictors exist between Black and White gynecologic cancer patients. Although small numbers of Black patients and low clinical trial prevalence are limitations, this descriptive analysis is important in understanding racially disparate clinical trial enrollment.

黑人和白人妇科癌症患者参加一线临床试验的决定因素。
目的:黑人和白人患者在妇科肿瘤临床试验入组方面存在差异;然而,很少有人研究临床试验入组预测因素的种族差异。我们研究了黑人和白人妇科癌症患者的一线临床试验入组决定因素是否不同。方法:我们使用国家癌症数据库对2014-2020年诊断的黑人和白人妇科癌症(子宫颈癌、卵巢癌、子宫癌)患者进行识别。采用多变量logistic回归来估计临床试验入组(是与否)与按种族分层的社会人口学、设施、肿瘤和治疗特征之间的关联的校正优势比(ORs)和95%置信区间(CIs)。我们在每个评估的预测因子和种族之间加入了一个相乘的相互作用项,以检验这种关联是否因种族而异。结果:纳入703,022例妇科肿瘤患者(诊断时平均[SD]年龄为60.9[13.1]岁)。黑人患者(49/86,058,0.06%)的临床试验入组率低于白人患者(710/616,964,0.11%)。只有癌症部位不同于种族:在黑人患者中,宫颈癌和子宫癌的诊断(OR = 4.63, 95% CI = 1.67-12.88)与较高的临床试验入组几率相关,而在白人患者中,宫颈癌(OR = 2.21, 95% CI = 1.48-3.29)和卵巢癌(OR = 3.40, 95% CI = 2.58-4.47)的诊断(与子宫癌相比)与较高的入组几率相关。大多数预测因素与白人患者的临床试验入组几率有关,而与黑人患者无关。结论:黑人和白人妇科癌症患者在一线临床试验入组预测指标上差异不大。尽管少数黑人患者和低临床试验患病率是局限性,但这种描述性分析对于理解种族差异的临床试验入组是重要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Cancer Causes & Control
Cancer Causes & Control 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6.6 months
期刊介绍: Cancer Causes & Control is an international refereed journal that both reports and stimulates new avenues of investigation into the causes, control, and subsequent prevention of cancer. By drawing together related information published currently in a diverse range of biological and medical journals, it has a multidisciplinary and multinational approach. The scope of the journal includes: variation in cancer distribution within and between populations; factors associated with cancer risk; preventive and therapeutic interventions on a population scale; economic, demographic, and health-policy implications of cancer; and related methodological issues. The emphasis is on speed of publication. The journal will normally publish within 30 to 60 days of acceptance of manuscripts. Cancer Causes & Control publishes Original Articles, Reviews, Commentaries, Opinions, Short Communications and Letters to the Editor which will have direct relevance to researchers and practitioners working in epidemiology, medical statistics, cancer biology, health education, medical economics and related fields. The journal also contains significant information for government agencies concerned with cancer research, control and policy.
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