Novel Method for Benchmarking Recruitment of African American Cancer Patients to Clinical Therapeutic Trials

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has historically evaluated the participation of underserved minorities within University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI) clinical trials in relation to the proportion of African Americans in the general population of the UPCI primary service area of Alleghen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical oncology 2008-11, Vol.26 (31), p.5074-5077
Hauptverfasser: MORGENLANDER, Keith H, WINTERS, Sharon B, LIN, Chyongchiou J, ROBERTSON, Linda B, HERON, Dwight E, HERBERMAN, Ronald B
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container_end_page 5077
container_issue 31
container_start_page 5074
container_title Journal of clinical oncology
container_volume 26
creator MORGENLANDER, Keith H
WINTERS, Sharon B
LIN, Chyongchiou J
ROBERTSON, Linda B
HERON, Dwight E
HERBERMAN, Ronald B
description The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has historically evaluated the participation of underserved minorities within University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI) clinical trials in relation to the proportion of African Americans in the general population of the UPCI primary service area of Allegheny County (12%). This standard seemed to be unrealistically high as a result of a younger age distribution of African Americans within the county. The proportions of African Americans within the following four separate county populations were compared using data from 2000 to 2004: general population; invasive cancer patients; invasive cancer patients diagnosed or treated at UPCI-affiliated facilities; and patients enrolled onto UPCI's clinical therapeutic trials. Although the proportion of African Americans within the general population was approximately 13%, only 9.8% of patients diagnosed with invasive cancers were African American. Approximately 9.5% of all cancer patients diagnosed or treated at UPCI facilities were African American, which is comparable to the county-wide percentage of African American cancer patients. Recruitment rate of African Americans to oncology clinical trials from within the UPCI patient population was 7.6%. The NCI benchmark did not reflect the actual invasive cancer incidence rate in African American patients. By comparing the percentage of African Americans contributing to cancer incidence with the percentage of African American cancer patients treated at research-affiliated institutions, a more appropriate benchmark was derived. The method developed by UPCI is recommended as a useful mechanism for benchmarking recruitment of African American cancer patients to clinical therapeutic trials at other cancer centers.
doi_str_mv 10.1200/JCO.2008.17.3039
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This standard seemed to be unrealistically high as a result of a younger age distribution of African Americans within the county. The proportions of African Americans within the following four separate county populations were compared using data from 2000 to 2004: general population; invasive cancer patients; invasive cancer patients diagnosed or treated at UPCI-affiliated facilities; and patients enrolled onto UPCI's clinical therapeutic trials. Although the proportion of African Americans within the general population was approximately 13%, only 9.8% of patients diagnosed with invasive cancers were African American. Approximately 9.5% of all cancer patients diagnosed or treated at UPCI facilities were African American, which is comparable to the county-wide percentage of African American cancer patients. Recruitment rate of African Americans to oncology clinical trials from within the UPCI patient population was 7.6%. The NCI benchmark did not reflect the actual invasive cancer incidence rate in African American patients. By comparing the percentage of African Americans contributing to cancer incidence with the percentage of African American cancer patients treated at research-affiliated institutions, a more appropriate benchmark was derived. 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source MEDLINE; American Society of Clinical Oncology Online Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Benchmarking
Biological and medical sciences
Black or African American - statistics & numerical data
Clinical Trials
Clinical Trials as Topic - standards
Clinical Trials as Topic - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Medical sciences
National Cancer Institute (U.S.)
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Neoplasms - ethnology
Neoplasms - pathology
Neoplasms - therapy
Patient Selection
Pennsylvania - epidemiology
Program Development
Tumors
United States - epidemiology
title Novel Method for Benchmarking Recruitment of African American Cancer Patients to Clinical Therapeutic Trials
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