Publication | Closed Access
Increasing Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Cancer Clinical Trials: An American Society of Clinical Oncology and Association of Community Cancer Centers Joint Research Statement
228
Citations
31
References
2022
Year
EthnicityConcerted CommitmentHealth Care DisparityCancer ManagementAmerican SocietyHealth DisparitiesEducationCancer RegistrationResearch StakeholdersRacial DisparitiesCancer EducationCancer DisparityRaceAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityClinical TrialsEthnic DiversityPatient EngagementRacial GroupEthnic StudiesPublic HealthRacismCancer ResearchCancer Clinical TrialsRacial EquityCancer LiteracyHealth PolicyCancer EpidemiologyOncology
Equity, diversity, and inclusion in cancer clinical trials are essential, as racial and ethnic diversity is crucial for understanding factors that influence treatment response. The statement offers specific recommendations to guide researchers in enhancing equity, diversity, and inclusion and increasing participation of under‑represented racial and ethnic groups in cancer trials. The authors propose six overarching recommendations, including integrating trials into high‑quality care, designing trials to reduce barriers, partnering with patients and community leaders, providing cross‑cultural training, investing in EDI programs, and publishing aggregate diversity data.
A concerted commitment across research stakeholders is necessary to increase equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) and address barriers to cancer clinical trial recruitment and participation. Racial and ethnic diversity among trial participants is key to understanding intrinsic and extrinsic factors that may affect patient response to cancer treatments. This ASCO and Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) Research Statement presents specific recommendations and strategies for the research community to improve EDI in cancer clinical trials. There are six overarching recommendations: (1) clinical trials are an integral component of high-quality cancer care, and every person with cancer should have the opportunity to participate; (2) trial sponsors and investigators should design and implement trials with a focus on reducing barriers and enhancing EDI, and work with sites to conduct trials in ways that increase participation of under-represented populations; (3) trial sponsors, researchers, and sites should form long-standing partnerships with patients, patient advocacy groups, and community leaders and groups; (4) anyone designing or conducting trials should complete recurring education, training, and evaluation to demonstrate and maintain cross-cultural competencies, mitigation of bias, effective communication, and a commitment to achieving EDI; (5) research stakeholders should invest in programs and policies that increase EDI in trials and in the research workforce; and (6) research stakeholders should collect and publish aggregate data on racial and ethnic diversity of trial participants when reporting results of trials, programs, and interventions to increase EDI. The recommendations are intended to serve as a guide for the research community to improve participation rates among people from racial and ethnic minority populations historically under-represented in cancer clinical trials. ASCO and ACCC will work at all levels to advance the recommendations in this publication.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1