Race and Ethnicity Reporting and Representation in Hemophilia Clinical Trials

Blood Adv. 2024 Mar 28:bloodadvances.2024012862. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2024012862. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTRacial and ethnic representativeness in clinical trials is crucial to mitigate outcomes disparities, however, diversity among hemophilia trials is unknown. The aim of this study is to examine the reporting and representation of race and ethnicity in trials of people with hemophilia (PwH). In this cross-sectional study, the clinicaltrials.gov database was queried in April 2023 for interventional clinical trials involving PwH between 2007-2022. The distribution of participants (observed) was compared with expected proportions based on United States (US) hemophilia treatment center (HTC) and country-specific census data with observed-to-expected ratios (OER). Of 129 trials included, 94.6% were industry sponsored, with a mean of 62 participants and mean age of 26.8 years. Overall, 52.0% (n=66) of trials reported data on race and ethnicity, increasing from 13.9% in 2007-2012 to 22.5% in 2013-2016 to 100% in 2017-2022 (p-value=.001). Among these 66 trials, 65.8%, 22.8%, 5.1%, 3.9% of participants were White, Asian, Hispanic, and Black, respectively. OERs were 10-20% significantly lower for White participants vs US HTC, and US, United Kingdom (UK), and Canadian census populations and approximately 75% lower for Black or Hispanic participants when compared to US HTC and US census population. OERs for Asian participants were 1.6 to 3 times higher than Canada, US and UK...
Source: Adv Data - Category: Epidemiology Authors: Source Type: research