Abstract
Background/Aims:
People with disability have higher rates of cancer, excluding skin cancer, compared with people without disability. Food and Drug Administration draft guidelines from 2024 address use of performance status criteria to determine eligibility for clinical trials, advocating for less restrictive thresholds. We examined the exclusion of people with disability from clinical trials based on performance status and other criteria.
Methods:
We reviewed eligibility criteria in approved interventional Phase III and Phase IV oncology clinical trials listed on ClinicalTrails.gov between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2023. Functional status thresholds were assessed using the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status Scale and Karnofsky Performance Scale in clinical trial eligibility criteria. Qualitative analysis was used to review eligibility criteria relating to functional impairments or disability.
Results:
Among 96 oncology clinical trials, approximately 40% had restrictive Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group and Karnofsky Performance Scale thresholds, explicitly including only patients with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group 0 or 1, or equivalent Karnofsky Performance Scale 70 or greater. Only 20% of studies included patients with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group 2 and Karnofsky Performance Scale 60. Multiple studies contained miscellaneous eligibility criteria that could potentially exclude people with disability. No studies described making accommodations for people with disability to participate in the clinical trial.
Conclusion:
Draft Food and Drug Administration guidelines recommend including patients with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group scores of 2 and Karnofsky Performance Scale scores of 60 in oncology clinical trials. We found that oncology clinical trials often exclude people with more restrictive performance status scores than the draft Food and Drug Administration guidelines, as well as other criteria that relate to disability. These estimates provide baseline information for assessing how the 2024 Food and Drug Administration guidance, if finalized, might affect the inclusion of people with disability in future trials.
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