Race, Ethnicity, And Poverty Linked To Worse Outcomes In Children Treated For High-risk Neuroblastoma

[ad_1]

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Children with high-risk neuroblastoma had worse outcomes if they were from certain racial/ethnic groups or were on public rather than private insurance, despite being treated in clinical trials with standardized protocols, according to a study led by investigators from Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.

The study shows that young patients from historically marginalized populations or from lower-income backgrounds had poorer five-year survival rates even when they were assigned to receive uniform initial treatment after diagnosis with high-risk neuroblastoma.

“These findings recapitulate what we have known for decades at the population level—children from historically marginalized groups are less likely to survive their cancer,” said Puja J. Umaretiya, MD, a clinical fellow in pediatric hematology/oncology at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s. “They add an essential next layer to our understanding of racial and ethnic disparities in childhood cancer, and that is that enrollment on clinical trials is not enough to achieve racial and ethnic equity in survival.” Umaretiya is presenting the study results at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual meeting, being held June 3-7, 2022, and the study is included in the ASCO press program.

“Clinical trials represent highly standardized care—yet even when receiving care on clinical trials, children with high-risk neuroblastoma do not experience the same outcomes based on their race, ethnicity, and whether they live in poverty,” said Umaretiya, lead author of the study. “This is key, because thus far attention has been paid to getting historically marginalized groups to trials with the assumption that this will reduce survival disparities, but our data suggest that in pediatrics, trial-enrollment is a first step, but clearly not a sufficient one.”

Senior author is Kira Bona, MD, MPH, a pediatric oncologist at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s with research focused on identifying poverty-associated outcome disparities in childhood cancer and developing interventions to mitigate those disparities.

Bona notes, “That stark racial/ethnic disparities in survival persist despite clinical trial participation makes it crystal clear that pediatric oncology trials must incorporate health equity interventions. If a new gene mutation were found to increase risk for trial-enrolled patients, pediatric oncology would not hesitate to begin intervening. That same urgency must apply to these data. It is imperative that pediatric oncologists begin to test healthcare delivery and supportive care interventions in our trials just like we do new drugs.”

The study looked at outcomes in 696 children enrolled in three Children’s Oncology Group (COG) clinical trials of treatment for high-risk neuroblastoma. Neuroblastoma is a type of cancer that forms in nerve tissue. It frequently begins in one of the adrenal glands but can also originate in the neck, chest, abdomen, or spine. High-risk disease is defined by age, how widely the disease has spread, and biologic characteristics of the cancer cells. The prognosis for long-term survival remains challenging. Treatment is usually an intensive combination of chemotherapy, surgery, stem cell transplantation, radiation, and immunotherapy.

Of the 696 patients in the COG trials, 11% were Hispanic, 16% were Black non-Hispanic, 4% were other non-Hispanic, and 69% were white non-Hispanic. One-third of the children were household poverty-exposed (covered by public insurance); 26% were exposed to neighborhood level poverty (living in a high-poverty ZIP code defined by 20% or more of the population living below the federal poverty line).

The five-year overall survival rate varied by race/ethnicity (47% for Hispanic children; 50% for other non-Hispanic children; 61% for white non-Hispanic children; and 63% for Black non-Hispanic children.) After adjusting for disease-associated factors, Hispanic children were 1.8 times more likely to die and other non-Hispanic patients were 1.5 times more likely to die than white non-Hispanic children.

Patients who had only public insurance (a proxy for household poverty) had a 53% five-year survival rate compared to 63% for others. The survival rate was also lower—54%—in children living in neighborhood level poverty compared with 62% for others.

“A huge strength of the way that this dataset was created is that we have the ability to look at potential mechanisms that may explain these survival disparities,” said Umaretiya. “For the first time, we will be able to ask whether certain groups experienced delays in therapy or were more likely to stop participating in trials perhaps because of competing family needs secondary to poverty. Most importantly, we will be able to start to look at what happens after relapse—a time when we know treatment becomes less standardized, which may increase the chance that racial, ethnic, or socioeconomic privilege helps some families access life-extending therapy for their children while others are less able to. Understanding what happens after relapse will be essential to guiding interventions to improve survival disparities and we are excited to take this on next.”


Outcomes worse for children with type 1 diabetes who are Black


More information:
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual meeting

Citation:
Race, ethnicity, and poverty linked to worse outcomes in children treated for high-risk neuroblastoma (2022, May 26)
retrieved 26 May 2022
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-05-ethnicity-poverty-linked-worse-outcomes.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

[ad_2]

Source link

Trending Topics

Features

Download and distribute powerful vaccination QI resources for your community.

Sign up now to support health equity and sustainable health outcomes in your community.

MCED tests use a simple blood draw to screen for many kinds of cancer at once.

FYHN is a bridge connecting health information providers to BIPOC communities in a trusted environment.

Discover an honest look at our Medicare system.

ARC was launched to create a network of community clinicians to diversify and bring clinical trials to communities of color and other communities that have been underrepresented.

The single most important purpose of our healthcare system is to reduce patient risk for an acute event.

Related Posts
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from Artificial Intelligence
Black and Asian Cancer Patients Wait Longer for Pain Relief in New Study
What Is Cyclosporiasis? The Foodborne Illness Showing Up in the News
Scroll to Top
Featured Articles
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from Artificial Intelligence
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from ...
Cancer Pain Care Access Gap Hits Black, Asian Patients
Black and Asian Cancer Patients Wait Longer for Pain Relief in New Study
What Is Cyclosporiasis Symptoms, Food Safety, and Reasons
What Is Cyclosporiasis? The Foodborne Illness Showing Up in the News
Why Minority Mental Health Awareness Month Matters More Than Ever
Why Minority Mental Health Awareness Month Matters More Than Ever
From Childhood Cancer to Alzheimer’s and ALS Celebrity Health Stories Spark National Conversation on Disease, Caregiving, and Equity
From Childhood Cancer to Alzheimer’s and ALS Celebrity Health Stories Spark N...
Learn How NMQF Is Transforming Early Disease Detection in Flint
Learn How NMQF Is Transforming Early Disease Detection in Flint
Categories
AI
ATTR-CM
BIPOC News
Cancer
Clinical Trials
Covid19
Diseases of the Body
Environment
Health Data
Health Equity Events
Health Policy
Health Tips
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive our latest news​
All Stories
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from Artificial Intelligence
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from ...
Cancer Pain Care Access Gap Hits Black, Asian Patients
Black and Asian Cancer Patients Wait Longer for Pain Relief in New Study
What Is Cyclosporiasis Symptoms, Food Safety, and Reasons
What Is Cyclosporiasis? The Foodborne Illness Showing Up in the News
BIPOC News
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from Artificial Intelligence
The Communities Most Burdened by Disease Should Be the First to Benefit from ...
Why Minority Mental Health Awareness Month Matters More Than Ever
Why Minority Mental Health Awareness Month Matters More Than Ever
From Childhood Cancer to Alzheimer’s and ALS Celebrity Health Stories Spark National Conversation on Disease, Caregiving, and Equity
From Childhood Cancer to Alzheimer’s and ALS Celebrity Health Stories Spark N...
Environment
UV Safety Awareness Month Raises Urgency on Skin Cancer Prevention and Sun Protection Equity
UV Safety Awareness Month Raises Urgency on Skin Cancer Prevention and Sun Pr...
Extreme Heat Safety Tips 5 Ways to Protect Your Health This Summer fyh.news
5 Heat Safety Tips That Could Protect Your Health This Summer
Lupus Awareness Event in Baltimore Aims to Support Research and Shine a Light on Health Disparities
Lupus Awareness Event in Baltimore Aims to Support Research and Shine a Light...
Work Force
A multigenerational Black and Hispanic family sitting together in a park, showing how Social Security helps support older adults, people with disabilities, and families across generations.
Millions of Older Americans Could Face Smaller Social Security Checks by 2032...
dreamstime_s_243253251
The Caregiver Journey: The Hidden Backbone of American Healthcare
Families gather at a Bronx community festival with live music, kids’ activities, and health booths sharing SOMOS social care resources and free screenings.
Celebrating Hispanic heritage while learning about health care

[xyz-ips snippet=”Output-Source-Name”]

Clinical Trials
Clinical Trial Diversity Remains a Critical Challenge in Alzheimer’s Research
Clinical Trial Diversity Remains a Critical Challenge in Alzheimer’s Research
Healthcare professional collecting a blood sample from a diverse patient as part of multicancer early detection screening.
Bridging the Gap: How Multicancer Early Detection Can Advance Health Equity i...
dreamstime_s_174488289
PCOS to PMOS: Why the 2026 Name Change Matters for Women’s Health

[xyz-ips snippet=”Output-Source-Name”]

Vaccines and Outbreaks
A parent checking a child's temperature during summer, illustrating the changing RSV patterns and year-round respiratory virus risks.
Can You Get RSV During the Summer?
Michelle Lam, MBA, of NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst & Amy Harris of NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst
Healthcare Leaders Spotlight Vaccine Equity and Adult Immunization Strategies...
Measles Outbreaks Surge: Essential Facts and Prevention Strategies
Measles Outbreaks Surge: Essential Facts and Prevention Strategies
Other Categories
AI
Read the latest AI News stories trending around the world
ATTR-CM
Cancer
Read the latest Cancer stories trending around the world
Covid19
Diseases of the Body
Read about the latest Diseases of the Body trending around the world
Friday Webinars
Every Friday, we bring you insightful webinars covering critical topics in healthcare, data equity, and policy reform.
Health Data
Read the latest Health Data stories trending around the world
Health Equity Events
Read the best Health Equity Events around the country.
Health Policy
Read the latest Health Policy stories trending around the world
Health Tips
Heart Health
Read the latest on Heart Health News, Stories and Tips.
kidney Health
Read more trending News about Kidney Health, Stories and Tips.