4.5 Article

Recruitment of African Americans into Cancer Clinical Research: Strategies and Outcomes

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11524-021-00565-8

Keywords

Cancer disparties; American African; Clinical research; Clinical trial; Breast cancer; Prostate cancer

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01CA154848, K99CA256038, P30CA177558]
  2. VCU Massey Cancer Center Biostatistics Core Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA016059]
  3. American Cancer Society (ACS) [MRSGT-06132-01 CBBPT, P30 CA075292]

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This study analyzed strategies and outcomes across four cancer prevention and control studies that recruited and retained African American participants. It found that many African Americans have a strong interest in cancer-related research and common strategies such as connecting with community stakeholders and identifying study leaders were effective. However, the study recruitment methods may not be generalizable to all African American populations due to varying geographic locations, study protocols, target populations, and available resources.
This study utilized data from four cancer-focused research studies that recruited and retained African Americans. Strategies and outcomes across four cancer prevention and control studies were analyzed. Descriptive statistics were used to display participant characteristics. There were 712 African American (Black) participants of which 14.6% were males. Common strategies involved connecting with community stakeholders and identifying study champions. Study recruitment methods might not be generalizable to all populations of African Americans due to geographic locations, study protocols (e.g., risk reduction), target populations (i.e., eligibility criteria), and available resources. Many African Americans have a strong interest in cancer-related research as demonstrated by participation levels. Teams that connect with relevant stakeholders and include diverse teams may be useful to engage larger numbers of minorities in cancer control research to impact morbidity and mortality.

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