Eligibility Criteria Perpetuate Disparities in Enrollment and Participation of Black Patients in Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials

Author:

Riner Andrea N.1ORCID,Girma Selamawit2,Vudatha Vignesh3ORCID,Mukhopadhyay Nitai4ORCID,Skoro Nevena2,Gal Tamas S.2ORCID,Freudenberger Devon C.3ORCID,Herremans Kelly M.1,George Thomas J.5ORCID,Trevino Jose G.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Florida College of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Gainesville, FL

2. Virginia Commonwealth University, Massey Cancer Center, Richmond, VA

3. Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Surgery, Richmond, VA

4. Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Biostatistics, Richmond, VA

5. University of Florida College of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology and Oncology, Gainesville, FL

Abstract

PURPOSE Clinical trials determine safety and efficacy of cancer therapeutics and establish standards of care. Minority patient participation in cancer clinical trials is dismal. We aimed to determine the impact of eligibility criteria on disparities in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) clinical trial candidacy. METHODS Traditional PDAC trial eligibility criteria were obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov. Patients with PDAC who sought care at Virginia Commonwealth University Health from 2010 to 2019 were included. Clinical data were obtained from billing codes and discrete values in the electronic medical record. Eligibility criteria differences between racial groups were determined using chi-squared tests and unconditional maximum likelihood-based odds ratios. RESULTS Among 676 patients, most identified as Black or White race (42.5% and 51.6%, respectively). Using traditional criteria, Black patients were more likely to be ineligible for participation compared with White patients (42.4% v 33.2%, P = .023) secondary to hypoalbuminemia (14.1% v 7.9%, P = .023), HIV (3.1% v 0.3%, P = .010), hepatitis B (1.7% v 0%, P = .043), and hepatitis C (9.1% v 3.4%, P = .005). Black patients were also numerically more likely to be ineligible because of renal dysfunction, recent coronary stenting, and uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. Prior cancer treatment excluded fewer Black than White patients (9.1% v 14.0%, P = .072), most attributable to lower rates of neoadjuvant chemotherapy received. Strategic eligibility criteria revisions could equalize ineligibility rates between Black and White patients (26.8% v 24.8%, P = .581). CONCLUSION Traditional eligibility criteria differentially exclude Black patients from participating in PDAC clinical trials. These criteria perpetuate disparities, limit generalizability, and are often not medically justifiable. Revised criteria may improve participant diversity, without compromising safety or study results.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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