Representation of older patients in cancer treatment trials
β Scribed by Edward L. Trimble; Dennis Cain; Richard S. Ungerleider; Michael A. Friedman; Christine L. Carter; Boris Freidlin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 577 KB
- Volume
- 74
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In 1990, the five leading causes of cancer death in men aged 65 and older were carcinomas of the lung, prostate, colon and rectum, and pancreas, and leukemia. For women in this age group, the five leading causes of cancer death were carcinomas of the lung, breast, colon and rectum, pancreas, and ovary. To determine the representation of the elderly in clinical trials, the 1992 accrual of the National Cancer Institute (NC1)-sponsored Clinical Cooperative Group treatment trials (which included more than 8000 elderly patients) for the aforementioned sites was compared with the 1990 incidence data from the NCI's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program. Of the male patients enrolled in the trials, an average of 39% were older than 65 (47.3% lung, 79.5% prostate, 47.5% colorectal, 45.6% pancreas, and 9.6% leukemia); whereas 25.9% of all women enrolled in trials were 65 or older (43.6% lung, 17.3% breast, 46.2% colorectal, 59.6% pancreas, and 35.4% ovary). With respect to incidence, older patients generally are underrepresented in cancer treatment trials. With the exception of the data on prostate cancer, each of the comparisons using the Z statistic gave probability values of less than 0.01. The most significant discrepancies between incidence and participation in cancer treatment protocols were noted for leukemia in males and breast cancer in females.
Possible explanations for these findings include (1) a research focus on aggressive therapy, which may be unacceptably toxic to the elderly; (2) presence of comorbidity in the elderly; (3) fewer trials available specifically aimed at older patients; (4) limited expectations for long term benefits on the part of physicians, relatives, and the patients themselves; and (5) a lack of financial, logistic, and social support for the participation of elderly patients in clinical trials.
Recognizing this situation, NCI recently sponsored
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Surgical treatment of nonβsmall cell lung cancer has been reported to be associated with increased mortality, especially when pneumonectomy has been employed. A 9βyear review of 81 patients treated surgically, with a policy of avoiding pneumonectomy and using internal radiation and wedg
## Abstract ## Background Depressive symptoms are common in older patients with schizophrenia; yet, few studies have examined the usefulness of antidepressants in this population. ## Objective We conducted a 10βweek singleβblind trial of citalopram (20β40 mg/day) vs no citalopram augmentation in
## Abstract ## BACKGROUND Shark cartilage has been a popular complementary or alternative medicine intervention. The basis for this popularity is the claim that sharks rarely get cancer because of the high proportion of cartilage in the shark's body. However, early studies were equivocal. Therefor
Do age, associated diseases, general state, or the stage of tumor determine the operability of breast cancer in the elderly? Risk factors are studied on the basis of data on 465 patients over 70 years of age who had breast cancer surgery between 1977 and 1986. Operative mortality of patients is anal