Are community oncology practices with or without clinical research programs different? A comparison of patient and practice characteristics

Author:

Altomare Ivy1ORCID,Wang Xiaoliang1ORCID,Kaur Maneet1ORCID,Guadamuz Jenny S12ORCID,Falk Sam1ORCID,Xiao Forrest1ORCID,Meropol Neal J13,Zhao Yihua1

Affiliation:

1. Flatiron Health, Inc , New York, NY, USA

2. School of Public Health, Division of Health Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley, CA, USA

3. Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University , Cleveland, OH, US

Abstract

Abstract Background Expanding access to clinical trials in community settings is a potential approach to addressing disparities in accrual of historically underrepresented populations. However, little is known about the characteristics of practices that do not participate in research. We investigated differences in patient and practice characteristics of US community oncology practices with high vs low engagement in clinical research. Methods We included patients from a real-world, nationwide electronic health record–derived, de-identified database who received active treatment for cancer at community oncology practices between November 1, 2017, and October 31, 2022. We assessed patient and practice characteristics and their associations with high vs low research engagement using descriptive analyses and logistic regression models. Results Of the 178 practices, 70 (39.3%) events had high research engagement, treated 57.8% of the overall 568 540 patient cohort, and enrolled 3.25% of their patients on cancer treatment trials during the 5-year observation period (vs 0.27% enrollment among low engagement practices). Practices with low vs high research engagement treated higher proportions of the following patient groups: ages 75 years and older (24.2% vs 21.8%), non-Latinx Black (12.6% vs 10.3%) or Latinx (11.6% vs 6.1%), were within the lowest socioeconomic status quintile (21.9% vs16.5%), and were uninsured or had no documented insurance (22.2% vs 13.6%). Conclusions Patient groups historically underrepresented in oncology clinical trials are more likely to be treated at community practices with limited or no access to trials. These results suggest that investments to expand the clinical research footprint among practices with low research engagement could help address persistent inequities in trial representation.

Funder

Flatiron Health, Inc

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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