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Race and Ethnicity Representation in Clinical Trials: Findings from a Literature Review of Phase I Oncology Trials

D. Ross Camidge, Haeseong Park, Karen E. Smoyer, Ira Jacobs, Lauren J. Lee, Zemfira Askerova, Justin M. McGinnis, Yousef Zakharia

2021Future Oncology50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aim: To provide an assessment of published literature on the demographic representation in Phase I trials of biopharmaceutical oncology agents. Materials & methods: We conducted a rapid evidence assessment to identify demographic representation reported in Phase I clinical trials for biopharmaceutical oncology agents published in 2019. Results: Globally, the population was predominantly White/Caucasian (62.2%). In the USA, the distribution was heavily skewed toward White/Caucasian (84.2%), with minimal representation of Blacks/African–Americans (7.3%), Asians (3.4%), Hispanics/Latinos (2.8%) or other race/ethnicity groups. Conclusion: Our data highlight that Phase I oncology trials do not reflect the population at large, which may perpetuate health disparities. Further research is needed to understand and address barriers to participation, particularly among under-represented groups

Topics & Concepts

Ethnic groupMedicineRace (biology)Clinical trialRepresentation (politics)PopulationOncologyWhite (mutation)GerontologyInternal medicineFamily medicineEnvironmental healthGender studiesPoliticsLawPolitical scienceAnthropologyChemistrySociologyBiochemistryGeneEthics in Clinical ResearchCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsBiomedical Ethics and Regulation
Race and Ethnicity Representation in Clinical Trials: Findings from a Literature Review of Phase I Oncology Trials | Litcius