Abstract

e18543 Background: Representation of minority patients (pts) in cancer clinical trials (CCTs) is low and contributes to health disparities. Our study sought to understand the beliefs and motivations of minority patients and to identify barriers and facilitators of CCT enrollment. Methods: 270 minority pts treated on CCT were identified from the medical record from 2018-2021. Of the 138 of pts alive, 13 (9.4%) consented. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted exploring motivations, barriers, and facilitators to CCT participation. Surveys collected demographics and explored beliefs towards cancer and factors that influenced participation. Results: Of the 13 participants, 9 were female (69%), 4 Hispanic (30%), 3 Black (23%), 3 multiple races (23%), 2 Asian (15%), 2 Native American (15%), and 1 Native Hawaiian (8%). Two pts had a high school education (15%), 7 ≥ 4-year college (54%), 4 ≥ 2-year college (30%). Eight pts were married, 3 divorced, 1 widowed, and 1 single. Employment status was: employed (4 pts, 30%), unemployed (1 pt, 8%), disabled (5 pts, 38%), retired (3 pts, 23%). All pts were insured. Median household was 3 people (range 1 to > 5); 3 pts had dependents. 9 pts had their own vehicle; 4 used public or subsidized transport. 2 pts had trouble finding transportation. Income was: 3 pts < 25K, 4 pts 25-35K, 1 pts 35-50 K, 1 pts 50-75K, and 4 pts > 75K. 4 pts received emotional support from religion. All pts had heard of CCTs and 6 (46%) had known other CT participants. Direct communication from healthcare provider was the most common way of hearing about CCT. 9 pts (69%) had trust or strong trust in experimental therapy/CCT; 4 pts (30%) were neutral. 8 pts (61%) believed standard therapy was needed to cure cancer. 5 pts (38%) believed God would decide if they die from cancer. 7 pts (54%) believed that worry makes cancer worse. Key themes about patients’ motivation to participate: chance for cure, staying positive, giving back to others, having representation in research, and advancing science. Key themes about facilitators to participation: supportive family, cost coverage for treatment, and limited treatment options. Key themes on participation: minimizing logistical barriers, decentralizing CCTs, increasing awareness via patient narratives, diversifying research staff, minimizing cost, and being clear on purpose and benefit of CCT. Factors from survey that influenced participation are summarized in Table. Conclusions: Understanding minority pts experience through in-depth interviews is valuable and may help with recruitment.[Table: see text]

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