白癜风临床试验中的种族和民族多样性:评估参与者人口统计学报告的回顾性横断面研究。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 DERMATOLOGY Journal of Drugs in Dermatology Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.36849/JDD.8117
Swathi Holla, Arielle Carolina Mora Hurtado, Sarah Gonzalez, Rohit Gupta, Amit G Pandya, Nada Elbuluk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:1,2招募能代表美国(US)人口的不同参与者对于确保研究结果的普遍性以及了解白癜风对不同患者群体的影响至关重要:本研究旨在确定美国白癜风临床试验中的人口统计学报告趋势,并确定参与者是否代表美国人口:方法:在clinicaltrials.gov上搜索美国白癜风临床试验。在2006年至2023年9月5日期间进行的试验,如果旨在治疗白癜风、在美国进行、已经完成或终止,均被纳入其中:在符合纳入标准的15项试验中,只有60%(9项)报告了参与者的种族/族裔。这 9 项研究包括 1,510 名参与者,其中非白人仅占 25.43%(n=384),西班牙裔占 20.40%。少数种族,尤其是黑人、美国原住民和夏威夷原住民群体的比例过低:我们研究的局限性包括样本量小、不同试验之间人口统计报告的差异以及美国人口普查对少数族裔群体的统计不足:少数种族和少数族裔群体在美国白癜风临床试验中的代表性仍然不足。鉴于白癜风的影响可能因患者的人口群体和肤色而异,研究人员必须有意识地将更具多样性和代表性的人群纳入白癜风临床试验中。2024;23(7):e164-e166. doi:10.36849/JDD.8117e.
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Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Vitiligo Clinical Trials: A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study Assessing Demographic Reporting of Participants.

Background: While the prevalence of vitiligo is similar across racial and ethnic groups, the effects of vitiligo vary by demographic group, culture, and skin color, with darker-skinned individuals facing greater stigma due to increased visibility of the disease.1,2 The recruitment of diverse participants that are representative of the United States (US) population is crucial to ensuring the generalizability of findings and understanding the impacts of vitiligo across diverse patient groups.   Objectives: This study aimed to determine demographic reporting trends in US vitiligo clinical trials and to determine whether participants are representative of the US population.

Methods: A search for US vitiligo clinical trials was conducted on clinicaltrials.gov. Trials conducted between 2006 to September 5, 2023, were included if they intended to treat vitiligo, were conducted in the US, and were completed or terminated.  Results: Of the 15 trials meeting inclusion criteria, only 60% (n=9) reported participant race/ethnicity. These 9 studies included 1,510 participants, of which only 25.43% (n=384) were non-White and 20.40% were Hispanic. There was disproportionately low representation of racial minorities, particularly Black, Native American, and Native Hawaiian groups.   Limitations: Limitations of our study include small sample size, variations in demographic reporting between trials, and undercounting of minority groups by the US Census.  Conclusions: Racial and ethnic minority groups remain underrepresented in US vitiligo clinical trials. Given that the impact of vitiligo can vary by the affected individual’s demographic group and skin color, investigators must be intentional about including a more diverse and representative population in vitiligo clinical trials.  J Drugs Dermatol. 2024;23(7):e164-e166. doi:10.36849/JDD.8117e.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
289
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Drugs in Dermatology (JDD) is a peer-reviewed publication indexed with MEDLINE®/PubMed® that was founded by the renowned Dr. Perry Robins MD. Founded in 2002, it offers one of the fastest routes to disseminate dermatologic information and is considered the fastest growing publication in dermatology. We present original articles, award-winning case reports, and timely features pertaining to new methods, techniques, drug therapy, and devices in dermatology that provide readers with peer reviewed content of the utmost quality. Our high standards of content are maintained through a balanced, peer-review process. Articles are reviewed by an International Editorial Board of over 160 renowned experts.
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