Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND: Despite decades of effort and proposed solutions to increase diversity in clinical trial participation, African Americans remain underrepresented. Race-specific review of clinical trial participation challenges suggests that engagement with African American physicians influence successful recruitment and appropriate enrollment of underrepresented groups in clinical research. Tailoring best-practices for minoritized populations cannot be sustainably facilitated without trusted community-academic partnerships. Engagement with African American community physicians creates capacity for leveraging resources critical to participation of African Americans in decentralized clinical trials (DCT). The Northeast Florida Clinical Trials and Translational Science (NEF-CTaTS) Consortium was formed in 2022 to address cancer health disparities experienced by minoritized, marginalized and underserved communities in NE Florida. AIM:The NEF-CTaTS Consortium convened a Focus Group with 22 African American community physicians who care for minoritized patients to solicit their input in fostering active research, research training, community outreach and engagement, and to address advantages of and barriers to forming a research network of minority physicians to conduct decentralized clinical trials and translational research. METHODS: Practicing community primary care physician members of the Northeast Florida Medical Society, a chapter of the National Medical Association where invited to participate. Physician demographic and practice information was collected from physicians who consented to participate prior to the Focus Group discussion. A Clinical Trial Needs Assessment was completed by each participating physician. The Physician Focus Group discussion was moderated by a skilled African American community physician member of the NEF-CTaTS consortium with extensive experience in conducting clinical trials. The discussion was recorded and transcribed for data analysis. IRB approval was obtained prior to informed consent, data collection and Focus Group Discussion. RESULTS: Qualitative analysis of the raw data is currently ongoing at the time of this submission. Transcribed discussion details and the observational notes identified thematic framework for descriptive statements, indexing, and sifting data. Mapping and interpretation of data is being analyzed for relationships, internal consistency, intensity of comments and specificity of responses. Analysis is scheduled to be complete within 4 weeks of abstract submission. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to appropriately address disparities in clinical trial participation and DCT participation of African Americans require distinct and deliberate efforts to engage African American physician stakeholders. Addressing issues of trust and the impact of social-determinants of health on minoritized populations can be culturally and appropriately addressed by community-academic partnerships. Citation Format: Floyd Willis, Folakemi Odedina, Kim Barbel Johnson, Rogers Cain, Jennifer Crook. Addressing African American physician engagement in decentralized clinical trial by clinical trials and translation science consortium focus group participation [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 15th AACR Conference on the Science of Cancer Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; 2022 Sep 16-19; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2022;31(1 Suppl):Abstract nr B035.

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