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Addressing Racial and Ethnic Disparities in
Cancer Care Delivery...(click here to read
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Enhancement of Recruitment of
African-Americans to National Oncology
Trials
African-Americans tend to have worse cancer
outcomes and their enrollment in clinical
trials continues to lag due to barriers of
mistrust and communication, as well as lack
of knowledge and access to the trials.
However, researchers at Meharry Medical
College and Vanderbilt Ingram Cancer Center
believe they have found a way to overcome
those barriers.
“Our research staff at Nashville General
Hospital at Meharry is dedicated and
permanent. We do not refer African-Americans
to another center for clinical trial
enrollment.
"We
offer clinical trial participation right
here as part of our best medical practices
if an appropriate trial is available,” said
Debra Wujcik, Ph.D., R.N., director of the
Cancer Clinical Trials Office.
Working with colleagues in the Meharry/Vanderbilt
Cancer Partnership, and funded by a grant
from the National Cancer Institute, Wujcik
and colleagues sought to determine if they
could increase the enrollment of
African-Americans in clinical trials at
their own center.
The current national average for enrollment
is about 2.5 percent.
Researchers established a procedure to
identify every patient eligible for a
clinical trial at the time of confirmed
diagnosis.
Prior to participation in the study, each
clinician was offered training on how best
to identify eligible patients and discuss
the clinical trial option.
No financial incentives were offered to the
patient or the clinician.
“Most of the time, the clinical trial option
is offered as an afterthought, which
contributes to mistrust because
African-Americans view themselves as part of
an experiment that may not be to their
benefit,” said Wujcik.
From 2001 to 2004, researchers screened 569
patients, of whom 164 were eligible for a
study (29 percent) and 95 agreed to enroll
(17 percent).
Overall, during this time period, 58 percent
of those who were offered a study agreed to
participate.
Of the patients who did not enroll in a
study, 66 percent were ineligible due to
additional medical conditions. Only 3
percent refused because it was research.
From 2005 to 2007, researchers refined their
techniques and screened 556 patients of whom
172 (32 percent) were eligible for a study
and 138 (25 percent) agreed to participate.
During this current interval, 80 percent of
patients offered a clinical trial
participated.
Since 2001, 1,125 patients have been
screened, 30 percent of whom had a study
available and 21 percent have enrolled.
“What that means is that 68 percent of
patients who were eligible agreed to
participate,” said Wujcik.
“This model is definitely replicable at a
hospital with a permanent and consistent
staff, adequate resources to conduct
clinical trials and a patient-oriented,
culturally sensitive environment.”
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