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Demographic recruitment bias of adults in United States randomized clinical trials by disease categories between 2008 to 2019: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Authors :
Ilana Buffenstein
Bree Kaneakua
Emily Taylor
Masako Matsunaga
So Yung Choi
Enrique Carrazana
Jason Viereck
Kore Kai Liow
Arash Ghaffari-Rafi
Source :
Scientific reports. 13(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To promote health equity within the United States (US), randomized clinical trials should strive for unbiased representation. Thus, there is impetus to identify demographic disparities overall and by disease category in US clinical trial recruitment, by trial phase, level of masking, and multi-center status, relative to national demographics. A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted using MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, and ClinicalTrials.gov, between 01/01/2008 to 12/30/2019. Clinical trials (N = 5,388) were identified based on the following inclusion criteria: study type, location, phase, and participant age. Each clinical trial was independently screened by two researchers. Data was pooled using a random-effects model. Median proportions for gender, race, and ethnicity of each trial were compared to the 2010 US Census proportions, matched by age. A second analysis was performed comparing gender, race, and ethnicity proportions by trial phase, multi-institutional status, quality, masking, and study start year. 2977 trials met inclusion criteria (participants, n = 607,181) for data extraction. 36% of trials reported ethnicity and 53% reported race. Three trials (0.10%) included transgender participants (n = 5). Compared with 2010 US Census data, females (48.3%, 95% CI 47.2–49.3, p p p p p p p p

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6bc369e383c4e5671ba247169600872b