接受胰腺癌监测的高危人群中的种族、民族和性别差异。

Bryson W Katona, Kelsey Klute, Randall E Brand, Jessica N Everett, James J Farrell, Kieran Hawthorne, Vivek Kaul, Sonia S Kupfer, Salvatore Paiella, Diane M Simeone, Daniel A Sussman, George Zogopoulos, Aimee L Lucas, Fay Kastrinos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自两年前成立以来,国际多中心胰腺癌早期检测(PRECEDE)联盟已经招募了接受胰腺导管腺癌(PDAC)监测的高危人群(HRI)。在此,我们旨在评估 PRECEDE 的入组差异。我们收集了 2020 年 5 月至 2022 年 3 月期间入组的 HRI 数据,HRI 的定义是符合基于指南的 PDAC 监测标准的 PRECEDE 入组参与者。在入组的1273名HRI中,有1113人符合入组条件,其中47.2%的人符合家族性胰腺癌标准,但没有已知的致病变体(PV),其余的人具有PDAC风险基因(CDKN2A、STK11、PRSS1、BRCA1、BRCA2、PALB2、ATM、MLH1、MSH2、MSH6、PMS2或EPCAM)的致病变体。研究参与者主要来自美国(82.7%),注册时最常见的年龄范围为 60-69 岁(37.4%),32.4% 的参与者患有非 PDAC 癌症。登记的受试者中存在种族/族裔和性别差异,大多数参与者为女性(65.9%),自称白人(87.7%),只有 2.9% 的人是西班牙裔。虽然超过 97% 的参与者同意将成像数据和生物样本用于研究,但同意率并不因种族/族裔、性别或年龄而有差异,因此表明所有亚群体在注册后都统一参与了研究活动。确保 PDAC 监测计划中 HRI 的多样性反映参与中心所服务的社区非常重要。在最近加入 PDAC 监测计划的 HRIs 中,种族/民族和性别方面的差异仍然很大,因此减少这些差异将是 PRECEDE 联合会今后工作的重点:胰腺癌监测对于降低胰腺癌死亡率至关重要;因此,胰腺癌监测研究必须招募不同的患者。我们的研究表明,在国际 PRECEDE 联合研究中,入组患者在种族/民族和性别方面存在巨大差异,这突出表明未来迫切需要努力减少这些差异。参见相关聚焦,第 305 页。
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Racial, Ethnic, and Sex-based Disparities among High-risk Individuals Undergoing Pancreatic Cancer Surveillance.

Since its inception two years ago, the international, multicenter Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection (PRECEDE) Consortium has enrolled high-risk individuals (HRI) undergoing pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) surveillance. Herein we aim to evaluate enrollment disparities in PRECEDE. Data on HRIs enrolled between May 2020 and March 2022 were collected, with HRIs defined as participants enrolled in PRECEDE meeting guideline-based criteria for PDAC surveillance. Of 1,273 HRIs enrolled, 1,113 were eligible for inclusion, with 47.2% meeting familial pancreatic cancer criteria without a known pathogenic variant (PV) and the remainder having a pathogenic variant in a PDAC-risk gene (CDKN2A, STK11, PRSS1, BRCA1, BRCA2, PALB2, ATM, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, or EPCAM). Study participants were predominantly from the United States (82.7%), the most common age range at enrollment was 60-69 years (37.4%), and a non-PDAC cancer was present in 32.4%. There were racial/ethnic- and sex-based disparities among enrolled subjects, as the majority of participants were female (65.9%) and self-reported white (87.7%), with only 2.9% having Hispanic ethnicity. While more than 97% of participants consented to utilize imaging data and biosamples for research, there was no difference in rate of consent based on race/ethnicity, sex, or age, thereby demonstrating uniform participation in research activities among all subgroups after enrollment. Ensuring that diversity of HRIs in PDAC surveillance programs mirrors the communities served by participating centers is important. Substantial racial/ethnic- and sex-based disparities persist among recently enrolled HRIs undergoing PDAC surveillance, and therefore reducing these disparities will be a major focus of the PRECEDE Consortium moving forward.

Prevention relevance: Pancreatic cancer surveillance is critical to decreasing pancreatic cancer mortality; therefore, it is important that pancreatic cancer surveillance studies enroll diverse patients. We demonstrate that substantial racial/ethnic- and sex-based disparities exist amongst enrollment in the international PRECEDE consortium, highlighting the dire need for future efforts to reduce these disparities. See related Spotlight, p. 305.

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