A population-level investigation of cancer clinical trials participation in a UK region.

Eur J Cancer Prev

aNorthern Ireland Cancer Registry bCentre for Public Health cSchool of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queen's University Belfast dNI Cancer Trials Centre and NI Cancer Trials Network, Belfast City Hospital, Belfast, UK.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze cancer trial participation in Northern Ireland since the establishment of the Cancer Trials Network and identify factors influencing this participation.
  • A cohort of over 51,000 cancer patients was linked to data on 1,316 trial participants, with findings indicating that trial participation increased three-fold with the network's introduction but remained low overall, especially among adults.
  • Factors affecting participation included age, sex, cancer type, distance to treatment centers, and disease stage, with children showing the highest participation rate at 21% compared to 2.05% for adults.

Article Abstract

The aim of this study was to document cancer trial participation since establishment of the Northern Ireland Cancer Trials Network and investigate population and disease factors associated with trial participation. An independent cohort of over 51 000 cancer patients from the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry covering the same population (2007-2012) was linked to a database of 1316 interventional cancer trial participants in a UK region. The primary outcome measure was participation in an intervention clinical trial. Patients were followed up until 31 March 2013. Kaplan-Meier tests and Cox proportional hazard models using person days at risk to allow for death were used to investigate factors associated with trial participation. Multivariate analysis assessed the impact of age, cancer type and stage, distance from the cancer centre (radiotherapy), marital status, deprivation quintile and rurality. Participation was analysed separately for children (<15 years) and young individuals (15-24 years). Trial recruitment increased three-fold with establishment of a network. Participation was the highest for children at 21%, but relatively low at 2.05% for adults, although higher for haematological malignancies (4.5%). Lower likelihood of trial participation in adults was associated with female sex, older age, distance from regional Cancer Centre and stage 1 disease. The introduction of a regional Cancer Trials Network was associated with increased participation; however, trial participation remains relatively low at the population level especially among elderly patients. Linkage of clinical trials and cancer registry database provide an easy mechanism to monitor trial representativeness at the population level.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CEJ.0000000000000373DOI Listing

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