Litcius/Paper detail

Representation of Racial and Ethnic Minority Populations in Dementia Prevention Trials: A Systematic Review

Ashley R. Shaw, Jaime Perales‐Puchalt, Ellen Johnson, Paul Espinoza-Kissell, Mariola Acosta-Rullán, Sarah Frederick, Abigail Lewis, Helen Chang, J. D. Mahnken, Eric D. Vidoni

2021The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite older racial and ethnic minorities (REMs) being more likely to develop dementia they are underrepresented in clinical trials focused on neurological disorders. Inclusion of REMs in dementia prevention studies is vital to reducing the impact of disparities in dementia risk. We conducted a systematic review to characterize the number of REM enrolled in brain health and prevention randomized controlled trials (RCTs). RTCs published from January 1, 2004 to April 21, 2020 were included. Participants were normal cognitive adults aged 45 years and older who participated in a Phase II or Phase III U.S. based preventative trial. Analyses were performed to examine differences in trial characteristics between RCTs that did and those that did not report race/ethnicity and to calculate the pooled proportion of each racial/ethnic group in randomized brain healthy prevention trials. A total of 42 studies consisting of 100,748 participants were included in the final analyses. A total of 26 (62%) reported some racial/ethnic identity data. The pooled proportion of REM participants was 0.256 (95% CI, 0.191, 0.326). There is a lack of racial/ethnic reporting of participants and REMs remain underrepresented in brain health prevention RCTs.

Topics & Concepts

Ethnic groupDementiaMedicineRandomized controlled trialGerontologyClinical trialInclusion (mineral)DemographyClinical psychologyPsychologyInternal medicineDiseaseAnthropologySocial psychologySociologyEthics in Clinical ResearchDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues