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Poster session 08

404P - A quantitative synthesis of disparities in the inclusion of younger adults and racial/ethnic minorities in colorectal cancer clinical trials

Date

10 Sep 2022

Session

Poster session 08

Topics

Cancer Care Equity Principles and Health Economics

Tumour Site

Colon and Rectal Cancer

Presenters

Irbaz Riaz

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2022) 33 (suppl_7): S136-S196. 10.1016/annonc/annonc1048

Authors

I.B. Riaz1, S.A.A. Naqvi2, M. Islam3, W. Ikram4, U. Raza3, A. Ayaz5, A. Riaz6, H. Amna7, H. Maqsood8, Z. Jin9, M.B. Sonbol10

Author affiliations

  • 1 Oncology, Medicine, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, 02115 - Boston/US
  • 2 Division Of Hematology And Medical Oncology, Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, 85054 - Phoenix/US
  • 3 Department Of Internal Medicine, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, 75330 - Karachi/PK
  • 4 Oncology, Medicine, Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, 85054 - Phoenix/US
  • 5 Department Of Internal Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 02215 - Boston/US
  • 6 Department Of Internal Medicine, Midwestern University - Downers Grove Campus, 85308 - Glendale/US
  • 7 Department Of Internal Medicine, Liaquat National Hospital (LNH), 74800 - Karachi/PK
  • 8 Department Of Internal Medicine, Nishtar Medical College and Hospital - NMC, 60000 - Multan/PK
  • 9 Medical Oncology Department, Mayo Clinic, 55905 - Rochester/US
  • 10 Hematology/medical Oncology Department, Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, 85054 - Phoenix/US

Resources

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Abstract 404P

Background

Colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence in younger adults has been rising for unclear reasons, and clinical outcomes also differ across racial/ethnic subpopulations.

Methods

We analyzed all trials for age disparity and trials recruiting from the US for racial/ethnic disparity from primary reports of CRC randomized controlled trials (1990-2021). We calculated enrollment-incidence ratios (EIR), which compare trial enrollment from an age or racial/ethnic subgroup against global estimates of incidence in the corresponding age subgroup (from Global Burden of Disease) or US-population-based incidence in the corresponding racial/ethnic subgroup (from SEER 21). Individual-trial EIRs were pooled using random-effects meta-analyses. Meta-regression was used to explore associations between key trial characteristics and EIR, as well as trends in EIR over the last three decades.

Results

Of 411 global trials, 139 trials (33.8%) reported the number of patients within pre-defined age subgroups/categories; among these, patients were most frequently reported as above/below 65 years of age (n = 86; 20.9%). Only 12 trials (2.9%) reported the number of participants younger than 50 years, while even fewer reported the number of participants younger than 45 or 40 years (n = 8; 1.9%). 78 trials (19.0%) reported a subgroup analysis by age. Of 37 US trials, 19 trials (51.4%) reported race and 5 (13.5%) reported ethnicity, with only 2 (5.4 %) reporting data on all 5 U.S. racial categories. Patients aged >65 years were significantly underrepresented (EIR: 0.85 [95% CI: 0.78 - 0.94]). Asians were under-enrolled (EIR: 0.44 [95% CI: 0.36 - 0.52]), as well as Black (EIR: 0.57 [95% CI: 0.49 - 0.66]) and Hispanic patients (EIR: 0.51 [95% CI: 0.39 - 0.67]) with the inclusion of larger, international trials. There were no significant changes in the degree of disparity over the last three decades.

Conclusions

Despite rising incidence of CRC in younger adults, clinical trials show infrequent reporting of this age group. Racial ethnic/minorities are significantly underrepresented in colorectal clinical trials based on their share of colorectal cancer incidence.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

Syed Arsalan Ahmed Naqvi.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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