Exploring Racial Disparities in Awareness and Perceptions of Oncology Clinical Trials: Cross-Sectional Analysis of Baseline Data From the mychoice Study.

IF 3.3 Q2 ONCOLOGY JMIR Cancer Pub Date : 2024-09-30 DOI:10.2196/56048
Ariel Hoadley, Linda Fleisher, Cassidy Kenny, Patrick Ja Kelly, Xinrui Ma, Jingwei Wu, Carmen Guerra, Amy E Leader, Mohammed Alhajji, Paul D'Avanzo, Zoe Landau, Sarah Bauerle Bass
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Abstract

Background: Black/African American adults are underrepresented in oncology clinical trials in the United States, despite efforts at narrowing this disparity.

Objective: This study aims to explore differences in how Black/African American oncology patients perceive clinical trials to improve support for the clinical trial participation decision-making process.

Methods: As part of a larger randomized controlled trial, a total of 244 adult oncology patients receiving active treatment or follow-up care completed a cross-sectional baseline survey on sociodemographic characteristics, clinical trial knowledge, health literacy, perceptions of cancer clinical trials, patient activation, patient advocacy, health care self-efficacy, decisional conflict, and clinical trial intentions. Self-reported race was dichotomized into Black/African American and non-Black/African American. As appropriate, 2-tailed t tests and chi-square tests of independence were used to examine differences between groups.

Results: Black/African American participants had lower clinical trial knowledge (P=.006), lower health literacy (P<.001), and more medical mistrust (all P values <.05) than non-Black/African American participants. While intentions to participate in a clinical trial, if offered, did not vary between Black/African American and non-Black/African American participants, Black/African American participants indicated lower awareness of clinical trials, fewer benefits of clinical trials, and more uncertainty around clinical trial decision-making (all P values <.05). There were no differences for other variables.

Conclusions: Despite no significant differences in intent to participate in a clinical trial if offered and high overall trust in individual health care providers among both groups, beliefs persist about barriers to and benefits of clinical trial participation among Black/African American patients. Findings highlight specific ways that education and resources about clinical trials could be tailored to better suit the informational and decision-making needs and preferences of Black/African American oncology patients.

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探索肿瘤临床试验认识和看法中的种族差异:对 "我的选择 "研究基线数据的横断面分析。
背景:在美国,黑人/非裔美国成年人参与肿瘤临床试验的比例偏低,尽管已努力缩小这一差距:本研究旨在探讨黑人/非裔美国人肿瘤患者对临床试验认知的差异,以改善对临床试验参与决策过程的支持:作为一项大型随机对照试验的一部分,共有 244 名接受积极治疗或后续护理的成年肿瘤患者完成了一项横断面基线调查,调查内容包括社会人口学特征、临床试验知识、健康素养、对癌症临床试验的看法、患者积极性、患者权益、医疗保健自我效能、决策冲突和临床试验意向。自我报告的种族分为黑人/非洲裔美国人和非黑人/非洲裔美国人。在适当的情况下,使用双尾t检验和独立的秩方检验来检验组间差异:结果:美国黑人/非洲裔参与者的临床试验知识水平较低(P=.006),健康素养较低(P=.007),而非美国黑人/非洲裔参与者的健康素养较高(P=.008):尽管两组患者参与临床试验的意向无明显差异,且对医疗服务提供者的整体信任度较高,但黑人/非洲裔美国人患者对参与临床试验的障碍和益处的看法依然存在。研究结果强调了临床试验教育和资源的具体调整方式,以更好地满足黑人/非裔美国人肿瘤患者在信息和决策方面的需求和偏好。
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来源期刊
JMIR Cancer
JMIR Cancer ONCOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
12 weeks
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