Literature DB >> 32211813

Enrollment of Older Patients, Women, and Racial/Ethnic Minority Groups in Contemporary Acute Coronary Syndrome Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review.

Ayman Samman Tahhan1, Muthiah Vaduganathan2, Stephen J Greene3, Alaaeddin Alrohaibani1, Mohamed Raad4, Mazen Gafeer1, Roxana Mehran5,6, Gregg C Fonarow6,7, Pamela S Douglas3, Deepak L Bhatt2, Javed Butler8.   

Abstract

Importance: Although age, sex, and race/ethnicity are important factors when generalizing the findings of clinical trials to routine practice, trends in the representation of these groups in contemporary acute coronary syndrome (ACS) trials are not well defined. Objective: To characterize the representation of older patients, women, and racial/ ethnic minorities in ACS randomized trials. Evidence Review: A systemic search was conducted of ACS trials published in 8 major medical journals between January 2001 and December 2018. Overall, 1 067 520 patients from 460 trials were included. Findings were compared with epidemiologic studies of patients with ACS. Findings: The median number of participants per trial was 711 (interquartile range, 324-2163) and the median number of sites per trial was 21 (interquartile range, 5-73). Overall, 207 trials (45.0%) studied drug therapy, and 210 (45.7%) evaluated procedural interventions. The mean (SD) age of trial participants was 62.9 (10.7) years and increased from 62.3 (11.2) years in 2001-2006 to 64.0 (10.4) years in 2013-2018 (P = .01). The corresponding mean (SD) age was 66.4 (14.8) years in US epidemiologic studies and 70.0 (13.5) years in European epidemiologic studies. The overall proportion of women enrolled was 26.8% and decreased over time, from 27.8% in 2001-2006 to 24.9% in 2013-2018 (P = .21 for trend). The corresponding weighted proportions of women were 38.0% in US epidemiologic studies and 32.0% in European studies. The distribution of racial/ethnic groups was reported in only 99 trials (21.5%). In trials with reported data, 15.0% of the trial participants were nonwhite, which increased from 12.0% in 2001-2006 to 14.0% in 2013-2018. Black patients represented 3.7% of all patients during the entire study time frame, Asian patients represented 9.6%, and Hispanic patients represented 7.8%. Trends in the representation of black patients remained unchanged from 2001-2006 (5.2%) to 2013-2018 (4.9%), while the enrollment of Asian and Hispanic patients increased from 2001-2006 to 2013-2018 (from 1.9% to 10.8% for Asian patients and from 5.4% to 14.5% for Hispanic patients). Conclusions and Relevance: Older patients and women are underrepresented in contemporary ACS trials compared with epidemiologic studies. Over time, there has been modest improvement in the representation of older patients but not women patients. More than three-quarters of trials did not report race/ethnicity data, with available data suggesting a modest increase in the enrollment of nonwhite patients owing to the enrollment of Asian and Hispanic patients. Enrollment of black patients remained low over time.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32211813     DOI: 10.1001/jamacardio.2020.0359

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Cardiol            Impact factor:   14.676


  21 in total

1.  Five-year clinical outcomes in patients with frailty aged ≥75 years with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome undergoing invasive management.

Authors:  Hanna Ratcovich; Benjamin Beska; Greg Mills; Lene Holmvang; Jennifer Adams-Hall; Hannah Stevenson; Murugapathy Veerasamy; Chris Wilkinson; Vijay Kunadian
Journal:  Eur Heart J Open       Date:  2022-05-16

2.  Is the contemporary care of the older persons with acute coronary syndrome evidence-based?

Authors:  Greg B Mills; Hanna Ratcovich; Jennifer Adams-Hall; Benjamin Beska; Emma Kirkup; Daniell E Raharjo; Murugapathy Veerasamy; Chris Wilkinson; Vijay Kunadian
Journal:  Eur Heart J Open       Date:  2021-12-17

3.  Association of clinical trial participation after myocardial infarction with socioeconomic status, clinical characteristics, and outcomes.

Authors:  Joel Ohm; Tomas Jernberg; David Johansson; Anna Warnqvist; Margrét Leosdottir; Kristina Hambraeus; Per Svensson
Journal:  Eur Heart J Open       Date:  2021-08-11

4.  In-hospital risk stratification algorithm of Asian elderly patients.

Authors:  Sazzli Kasim; Sorayya Malek; Song Cheen; Muhammad Shahreeza Safiruz; Wan Azman Wan Ahmad; Khairul Shafiq Ibrahim; Firdaus Aziz; Kazuaki Negishi; Nurulain Ibrahim
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-10-20       Impact factor: 4.996

5.  Influence of sex, age and race on coronary and heart failure events in patients with diabetes and post-acute coronary syndrome.

Authors:  Xavier Rossello; João Pedro Ferreira; Francisca Caimari; Zohra Lamiral; Abhinav Sharma; Cyrus Mehta; George Bakris; Christopher P Cannon; William B White; Faiez Zannad
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2021-04-30       Impact factor: 5.460

6.  Sex, Permanent Drug Discontinuation, and Study Retention in Clinical Trials: Insights From the TIMI trials.

Authors:  Emily S Lau; Eugene Braunwald; David A Morrow; Robert P Giugliano; Elliott M Antman; C Michael Gibson; Benjamin M Scirica; Erin A Bohula; Stephen D Wiviott; Deepak L Bhatt; Marc P Bonaca; Christopher P Cannon; KyungAh Im; Jianping Guo; Marc S Sabatine; Michelle L O'Donoghue
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 29.690

Review 7.  Management of Antithrombotic Therapy after Acute Coronary Syndromes.

Authors:  Fatima Rodriguez; Robert A Harrington
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2021-02-04       Impact factor: 176.079

8.  Lessons from my Elders on Recruitment and Retention into Health Research.

Authors:  Nina T Harawa
Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  2020-11-19       Impact factor: 2.006

9.  The effect of sex on the efficacy and safety of dual antithrombotic therapy with dabigatran versus triple therapy with warfarin after PCI in patients with atrial fibrillation (a RE-DUAL PCI subgroup analysis and comparison to other dual antithrombotic therapy trials).

Authors:  David S Eccleston; Joseph M Kim; Jurien M Ten Berg; P Gabriel Steg; Deepak L Bhatt; Stefan H Hohnloser; Anne de Veer; Matias Nordaby; Corinna Miede; Takeshi Kimura; Gregory Y H Lip; Jonas Oldgren; Christopher P Cannon
Journal:  Clin Cardiol       Date:  2021-05-27       Impact factor: 2.882

10.  Outcomes in CME/CPD - Special Collection: How to make the "pyramid" a perpetuum mobile.

Authors:  Reinhard Griebenow; Peter Mills; Jörg Stein; Henrik Herrmann; Malte Kelm; Craig Campbell; Robert Schäfer
Journal:  J Eur CME       Date:  2020-10-27
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