Black females and minorities underrepresented in COVID-19 trials. Diverse representation strategies needed, especially in prevention trials. Explore potential solutions today.
Black Females were underrepresented in treatment trials, while Asian and Black participants were underrepresented in prevention trials
Hong Xiao, Ph.D., from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, and colleagues conducted a systematic literature review to assess the representation of participants in COVID-19 trials.
Using data from 122 U.S.-based COVID-19 clinical trials (176,654 participants), the researchers found that estimated representation in prevention and treatment trials versus the U.S. population with COVID-19 was 48.9 and 44.6 percent versus 52.4 percent for female participants; 23.0 and 36.6 percent versus 17.7 percent for Hispanic or
Female participants were underrepresented in treatment trials (85.1 percent of expected). Black participants (53.7 percent expected) and Asian participants (64.4 percent expected) were underrepresented in prevention trials compared with expected rates in the COVID-19 reference population. Hispanic or Latino participants were overrepresented in treatment trials (206.8 percent of expected).
“Strategies to better ensure diverse representation in COVID-19 studies are needed, especially for prevention trials,” the authors write.
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