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  • Racial and ethnic dispariti...
    Aldrighetti, Christopher M.; Niemierko, Andrzej; Van Allen, Eliezer Mendel; Willers, Henning; Kamran, Sophia C.

    Journal of clinical oncology, 05/2021, Letnik: 39, Številka: 15_suppl
    Journal Article

    Abstract only 3014 Background: Precision medicine has revolutionized oncologic care in the United States (US) in the past two decades. While the US cancer population is rapidly diversifying, enrollment of a diverse patient population into clinical trials lags behind. In particular, it is unclear whether minority patients are adequately represented in precision oncology trials. Herein, we report racial/ethnic representation in precision oncology studies spanning four common cancer types (breast, lung, prostate, colorectal cancers). Methods: Completed US clinical studies incorporating precision medicine objectives based on a set of 12 precision oncology search terms (including tumor biomarker, whole exome sequencing, tumor mutation testing, gene expression signatures, tumor microarray, tumor genomics, et cetera) were identified from Clinicaltrials.gov. Studies were reviewed for reporting race/ethnicity for inclusion in the analysis. The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database was used to determine incidence of race/ethnicity in the US cancer population, correlated with disease site and median year of enrollment for each trial. The difference in incidence (D-I) was defined as the median absolute difference in study racial enrollment and SEER incidence, with a negative value corresponding to underrepresentation. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare median D-I to a value of 0 by racial/ethnic subgroups. Results: Overall, 156 studies were identified; 40.3 and 27.5% studies enrolling from 2000 through 2020 met the inclusion criteria for racial and ethnic subgroups reporting, respectively. Of 4,418 total enrollees, 82.5% were White, 10.5% Black, 3.8% Asian, and 0.4% American Indian/Alaskan Native (AIAN). Ethnically, 6.4% were Hispanic. The D-I was +2.2% for Whites (interquartile range (IQR) = -43.7% to 25.4%; P < 0.013), -0.74% AIAN (IQR = -0.8% to +5.9%; P < 0.001), -2.5% Asians (IQR = -4.1% to 30.4%; P < 0.152), -4.6% Blacks (IQR = -20.1% to +45.0%; P < 0.001), and -8.1% Hispanics (IQR = -14.8% to + 29.6%; P < 0.001). By disease site, Blacks were significantly underrepresented proportional to their cancer incidence among prostate (D-I of -11.8%, p = 0.009) and lung studies (D-I of -5.9%, p = 0.013), while prostate studies significantly overrepresented Whites (D-I +14.0%, p = 0.005). Lung studies overrepresented Asians (D-I +0.49%) consistent with the prominent role of targetable oncogene drivers in this population. Conclusions: Results demonstrate an underrepresentation of minority racial groups and an overrepresentation of Whites in precision oncology studies. Increased emphasis on equitable enrollment onto these studies is critical, as resulting precision Omic conclusions are used to stratify populations and personalize treatments. A continued lack of diversity among enrollees may further leave behind vulnerable minority populations in the era of precision oncology.