Sex-Based Disparities Among Cancer Clinical Trial Participants
Menée à partir des données des registres américains des cancers et de données portant sur 147 essais cliniques incluant des patients atteints d'un cancer du poumon ou d'un cancer colorectal, cette étude analyse, en fonction du sexe, les taux de participation aux essais cliniques
Landmark investigation two decades ago demonstrated sex-based disparities among participants in cancer cooperative group trials. While federal efforts have aimed to improve representation of female patients in government-sponsored research, less is known about sex disparities in the broader landscape of modern oncologic randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Using ClinicalTrials.gov, we identified RCTs related to colorectal or lung cancer (the 2 most common non-sex-specific disease sites). Among the 147 included trials, the proportion of female patients enrolled on trial was on average 6.8% (95%CI = -8.8% to –4.9%) less than the proportion of female patients in the population by disease site (p < 0.001). While no statistically significant underrepresentation of women was noted within the 26 cooperative group trials, sex disparities were markedly heightened for the 121 non-cooperative-group-sponsored trials. Furthermore, underrepresentation of women did not improve with time. Future efforts should therefore focus on addressing these pervasive sex-based enrollment disparities beyond cooperative group trials alone.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute , article en libre accès, 2018