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Article
Clinical Trial Participation among Ethnic/Racial Minority and Majority Patients with Advanced Cancer: What Factors Most Influence Enrollment?
Women’s and Gender Studies Faculty Publication Series
  • Rachel Jimenez, Harvard Radiation Oncology Program
  • Baohui Zhang, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • Steven Joffe, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • Matthew Nilsson, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • Lorna Rivera, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Jan Mutchler, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Christopher Lathan, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • M. Elizabeth Paulk, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
  • Holly G. Prigerson, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2013
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Studies using administrative data report that racial/ethnic minority patients enroll in clinical trials less frequently than white patients. We studied a cohort of terminally ill cancer patients to determine a) if racial/ethnic minority patients have lower rates of drug trial enrollment than white patients once socioeconomic characteristics are accounted for and b) what factors most influence drug trial enrollment among patients with advanced canceroverall.

METHODS: Coping with Cancer (CwC) is a National Cancer Institute/National Institute of Mental Health (NCI/NIMH)-funded multisite, prospective, longitudinal study of patients with advanced cancer. Baseline interviews assessed drug trial enrollment as well as socioeconomic characteristics. Logistic regression models estimated associations between drug trial enrollment and baseline characteristics. Stepwise, backward, and subset model selection was applied to select the final model where characteristics significant at α=0.05 remained in the model.

RESULTS: At a median of 4.4 months prior to death, 35 of 358 patients (9.8%) were enrolled in a drug trial. In unadjusted analyses, race/ethnicity, health insurance, performance status, recruitment site, cancer type, preference for life-extending care, and lack of end-of-life care planning were associated (p

CONCLUSION: Patient race/ethnicity was not associated with clinical trial enrollment after adjustment for socioeconomic covariates. Patients with advanced cancer endorsing less engagement in end-of-life planning were more likely to be enrolled in a clinical trial.

Community Engaged/Serving
No, this is not community-engaged.
Publisher
Journal of Palliative Medicine
Citation Information
Lorna Rivera. "Clinical Trial Participation among Ethnic/Racial Minority and Majority Patients with Advanced Cancer: What Factors Most Influence Enrollment?" Journal of Palliative Medicine 16.3 (2013): 256.