The Concerning Disaggregation of Gender and Racial/Ethnicity Disparity Investigation at Recent ASCO Annual Meetings.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q4 ONCOLOGY American Journal of Clinical Oncology-Cancer Clinical Trials Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-19 DOI:10.1097/COC.0000000000001062
Ulysses G Gardner, Shearwood McClelland
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Abstract

Objectives: There has been a recent emphasis in the peer-reviewed oncology literature on examining disparities by gender. Such emphasis provides an excellent opportunity to simultaneously examine race/ethnicity disparities in the same cohort. The degree to which gender disparities research has been performed concomitantly with racial disparities research at prominent oncologic societies has yet to be investigated.

Methods: ABSTRACTs presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting were reviewed. Abstracts selected for the oral abstract or clinical science symposium sessions at the 2020, 2021, and 2022 annual meetings were evaluated to determine the amount of gender disparities research presented. Such research was further assessed to determine whether racial/ethnicity disparities were examined simultaneously.

Results: From 2020 to 2022, 1219 abstracts were presented at the ASCO annual meetings, oral abstract or clinical science symposium sessions. Of these, 7 involved gender disparities examination, of which only 2 (29%) concomitantly examined race/ethnicity. No study since 2020 concomitantly examined gender and racial disparities.

Conclusions: More than 70% of gender disparities work presented at ASCO has been disaggregated from concomitant racial disparities examination, with complete disaggregation since 2021. Gender disparities work remains a miniscule aspect of the overall research landscape. Future work in examining gender disparities may be best aggregated with racial/ethnicity disparities to optimize timely solutions in both areas; such work could potentially be incentivized from the inclusion criteria of future funding mechanisms.

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关于在最近的ASCO年会上对性别和种族/民族差异进行分类调查的问题。
目的:最近同行评审的肿瘤学文献强调了按性别检查差异。这种强调提供了一个极好的机会,可以同时检查同一队列中的种族/民族差异。性别差异研究与著名肿瘤学学会的种族差异研究同时进行的程度尚待调查。方法:回顾在美国临床肿瘤学会(ASCO)年会上发表的摘要。对2020年、2021年和2022年年度会议上为口头摘要或临床科学研讨会选择的摘要进行了评估,以确定提出的性别差异研究的数量。对此类研究进行了进一步评估,以确定是否同时检查了种族/族裔差异。结果:从2020年到2022年,共有1219篇摘要在ASCO年会、口头摘要或临床科学研讨会上发表。其中,7项涉及性别差异检查,其中只有2项(29%)同时检查种族/民族。自2020年以来,没有一项研究同时考察了性别和种族差异。结论:ASCO提交的70%以上的性别差异工作已从伴随的种族差异检查中进行了分类,自2021年以来已完全分类。性别差异工作仍然是整个研究领域中一个微不足道的方面。未来研究性别差异的工作最好与种族/族裔差异结合起来,以优化这两个领域的及时解决方案;这类工作可能会受到未来筹资机制纳入标准的激励。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
130
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: ​​​​​​​American Journal of Clinical Oncology is a multidisciplinary journal for cancer surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, GYN oncologists, and pediatric oncologists. The emphasis of AJCO is on combined modality multidisciplinary loco-regional management of cancer. The journal also gives emphasis to translational research, outcome studies, and cost utility analyses, and includes opinion pieces and review articles. The editorial board includes a large number of distinguished surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, GYN oncologists, pediatric oncologists, and others who are internationally recognized for expertise in their fields.
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