Under-representation of older Indian persons with cancer in clinical trials
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Published:2024-08
Issue:1
Volume:3
Page:e000445
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ISSN:2752-7948
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Container-title:BMJ Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:bmjonc
Author:
Noronha Vanita, Patil Vijay, Menon Nandini, Kolkur Manali, Peelay Zoya, Shah Minit, Mathrudev Vijayalakshmi, Shah Srushti, Nawale Kavita, Nair Nita S, Ramaswamy Anant, Ostwal Vikas, Ghosh-Laskar Sarbani, Agarwal Jai Prakash, Chaturvedi Pankaj, Chopra Supriya, Murthy Vedang, Myatra Sheila N, Divatia Jigeeshu, Gota Vikram, Gupta Sudeep, Chaudhari Vikram, Jiwnani Sabita, Shrikhande Shailesh V, Vaish Richa, Chaukar Devendra, Thiagarajan Shivakumar, Nair Sudhir, D'Cruz Anil, Oak Amey, Hawaladar Rohini, Roy Chowdhury Oindrila, Banavali Shripad, Badwe Rajendra, Prabhash KumarORCID
Abstract
ObjectiveOlder patients with cancer have traditionally been under-represented in global clinical trials. There are no data from India regarding this issue.Methods and analysisThis was a retrospective analysis done at our institute on interventional studies conducted between 2003 and 2023 in adult patients with malignancies. We excluded studies done exclusively in the paediatric population and observational studies.ResultsWe included 21 894 patients enrolled in 150 interventional trials from the departments of surgical, medical, and radiation oncology, anaesthesia, and clinical pharmacology; 110 (73.3%) were investigator initiated. There were 38 trials (25.3%) in breast cancer (6141 patients, 28%), and 33 (22%) in head and neck cancer (6975 patients, 31.9%). Studies were predominantly phase III (97 trials (64.7%)). Multicentric studies comprised approximately one-third (48, 32%). The median age of enrolled patients was 51 years (IQR 43–59). There were 5132 (23.4%) participants aged ≥60 years, 2678 (12.2%) ≥65 years and 1045 (4.8%) ≥70 years. Data from the hospital registry revealed that 30% of adult registrations were ≥60 years. There was a significant increase in the proportion of older patients enrolled in clinical trials from 2003 (8%) to 2019 (22%) compared with their proportion in the hospital registry (stable at 28%–29%); p<0.001.ConclusionThere is a gap between the proportion of older Indian adults with cancer in the hospital registry and those enrolled in interventional clinical trials, however, this gap has shrunk over time. Various factors that limit the recruitment of this vulnerable cohort like age-specific eligibility criteria are immediately actionable to make clinical trials more inclusive.
Reference31 articles.
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