Representation of women in clinical trials supporting FDA‐approval of contemporary cancer therapies

Author:

Kalathoor Sujay1,Ghazi Sanam1ORCID,Otieno Beryl12,Babcook Melissa A.13,Chen Sunnia1,Nidhi Neha1,Bae Junu1,Pierre‐Charles Jovan1,Breathett Khadijah4,Mazimba Sula5,Johnson Amber6,Brewer LaPrincess7,Mohammed Selma8,Carter Rebecca R.19,Bonsu Janice M.1,Ferdousi Mussammat1,Kola‐Kehinde Onaopepo1,McLaughlin Eric10,Brammer Jonathan11,Ruz Patrick1,Khan Sarah1,Odei Bismarck12,Mitchell Darrion12,Wei Lai10,Patel Prem1,Paskett Electra D.13,Addison Daniel113

Affiliation:

1. Cardio‐Oncology Program, Division of Cardiology The Ohio State University Medical Center Columbus Ohio USA

2. Department of Medicine Greater Baltimore Medical Center Baltimore Maryland USA

3. Division of Oncology James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute at The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

4. Division of Cardiology Indiana University Indianapolis Indiana USA

5. Division of Cardiology University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

6. Division of Cardiology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

7. Division of Cardiology, Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

8. Division of Cardiology Creighton University Omaha Nebraska USA

9. Center for the Advancement of Team Science, Analytics, and Systems Thinking (CATALYST) Ohio State University College of Medicine Columbus Ohio USA

10. Center for Biostatistics, Department of Biomedical Informatics The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

11. Division of Hematology James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute at The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

12. Department of Radiation Oncology James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute at The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

13. Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractContemporary anticancer therapies frequently have different efficacy and side effects in men and women. Yet, whether women are well‐represented in pivotal trials supporting contemporary anticancer drugs is unknown. Leveraging the Drugs@FDA database, clinicaltrials.gov, MEDLINE, and publicly available FDA‐drug‐reviews, we identified all pivotal (phase II and III) non‐sex specific trials supporting FDA‐approval of anticancer drugs (1998–2018). Observed‐enrollment‐rates were compared to expected‐population‐rates derived from concurrent US‐National‐Cancer‐Institute's Surveillance‐Epidemiology‐and‐End‐Results (SEER) reported rates and US‐Census databases. Primary outcome was the proportional representation of women across trials, evaluated by a participation‐to‐prevalence ratio (PPR), according to cancer type. Secondary outcome was the report of any sex‐specific analysis of efficacy and/or safety, irrespective of treatment‐arm. Overall, there were 148 trials, enrolling 60,216 participants (60.5 ± 4.0 years, 40.7% female, 79.1% biologic, targeted, or immune‐based therapies) evaluating 99 drugs. Sex was reported in 146 (98.6%) trials, wherein 40.7% (24,538) were women, compared to 59.3% (35,678) men (p < .01). Altogether, women were under‐represented in 66.9% trials compared to the proportional incidence of cancers by respective disease type; weight‐average PPR of 0.91 (relative difference: ‐9.1%, p < .01). Women were most under‐represented in gastric (PPR = 0.63), liver (PPR = 0.71), and lung (PPR = .81) cancer trials. Sex‐based safety data was reported in 4.0% trials. There was no association between adequate female enrollment and drug efficacy (HR: 0.616 vs. 0.613, p = .96). Over time, there was no difference in the percentage of women recruited into clinical trials. Among pivotal clinical trials supporting contemporary FDA‐approved cancer drugs, women were frequently under‐represented and sex‐specific‐efficacy and safety‐outcomes were commonly not reported.

Publisher

Wiley

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