Examining the Representation of Minority Race and Ethnicity Groups in Breast Cancer Clinical Trials in the USA Published 2012-2022.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
683 subjects), race/ethnicity was reported in 785 (73.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
All four primary race groups in the USA were represented in 24.7% of trials, and race/ethnicity was included as a factor in outcome analysis in 8.7%. [CONCLUSIONS] Although race/ethnicity reporting has improved, minority populations remain gravely underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials, limiting the generalizability of trial results in these populations.
[BACKGROUND] Diversity of study populations in clinical trials is essential to addressing health outcome disparities in cancer care.
- 표본수 (n) 871,683
- p-value p < 0.001
APA
Dimaano K, Castillo O, et al. (2026). Examining the Representation of Minority Race and Ethnicity Groups in Breast Cancer Clinical Trials in the USA Published 2012-2022.. Annals of surgical oncology. https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-026-19214-y
MLA
Dimaano K, et al.. "Examining the Representation of Minority Race and Ethnicity Groups in Breast Cancer Clinical Trials in the USA Published 2012-2022.." Annals of surgical oncology, 2026.
PMID
41729467 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[BACKGROUND] Diversity of study populations in clinical trials is essential to addressing health outcome disparities in cancer care. The objective of this study was to examine the inclusion of minority race/ethnicity groups in breast cancer clinical trials published in the United States of America (USA) 2012-2022.
[PATIENTS AND METHODS] Breast cancer clinical trials published as a full manuscript in the USA 2012-2022 were identified. Trial characteristics and race/ethnicity of subjects were collected to assess the degree of reporting and inclusion of minority populations. Participation to Prevalence Ratios (PPRs) were utilized as a measure of inclusion.
[RESULTS] In 1068 trials (n = 871,683 subjects), race/ethnicity was reported in 785 (73.5%), increasing from 2012 to 2016 (68.8%) to 2017 to 2022 (79.3%, p < 0.001). Higher rates of race/ethnicity reporting were independently associated with later publication year, randomized or phase II trials, and those reporting social determinants of health. Of the 732,969 subjects for whom race/ethnicity was reported, 16,551 (2.3%) were Asian American/Pacific Islander (Asian), 43,288 (5.9%) were Black/African American, 22,464 (3.1%) were Hispanic/Latinx, and 570,897 (77.9%) were Non-Hispanic White. A PPR above 0.8 was achieved in 27.3% of trials that reported race for Asian subjects, 44.7% for Black/African American subjects, 27.4% for Hispanic/Latinx subjects, and in 5.7% for all three minority groups. All four primary race groups in the USA were represented in 24.7% of trials, and race/ethnicity was included as a factor in outcome analysis in 8.7%.
[CONCLUSIONS] Although race/ethnicity reporting has improved, minority populations remain gravely underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials, limiting the generalizability of trial results in these populations.
[PATIENTS AND METHODS] Breast cancer clinical trials published as a full manuscript in the USA 2012-2022 were identified. Trial characteristics and race/ethnicity of subjects were collected to assess the degree of reporting and inclusion of minority populations. Participation to Prevalence Ratios (PPRs) were utilized as a measure of inclusion.
[RESULTS] In 1068 trials (n = 871,683 subjects), race/ethnicity was reported in 785 (73.5%), increasing from 2012 to 2016 (68.8%) to 2017 to 2022 (79.3%, p < 0.001). Higher rates of race/ethnicity reporting were independently associated with later publication year, randomized or phase II trials, and those reporting social determinants of health. Of the 732,969 subjects for whom race/ethnicity was reported, 16,551 (2.3%) were Asian American/Pacific Islander (Asian), 43,288 (5.9%) were Black/African American, 22,464 (3.1%) were Hispanic/Latinx, and 570,897 (77.9%) were Non-Hispanic White. A PPR above 0.8 was achieved in 27.3% of trials that reported race for Asian subjects, 44.7% for Black/African American subjects, 27.4% for Hispanic/Latinx subjects, and in 5.7% for all three minority groups. All four primary race groups in the USA were represented in 24.7% of trials, and race/ethnicity was included as a factor in outcome analysis in 8.7%.
[CONCLUSIONS] Although race/ethnicity reporting has improved, minority populations remain gravely underrepresented in breast cancer clinical trials, limiting the generalizability of trial results in these populations.