In 2016, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) designated SGMs as a health disparity population for NIH research. As defined by NIH, sexual and gender minorities include “lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender populations, as well as those whose sexual orientation, gender identity and expressions, or reproductive development varies from traditional, societal, cultural, or physiological norms.”1
Announcing the designation, the then-Director of the National Institute of Minority Health Eliseo J. Perez-Stable, MD, acknowledged that “Mounting evidence indicates that SGM populations have less access to health care and higher burdens of certain diseases, such as depression, cancer, and HIV/AIDS. But the extent and causes of health disparities are not fully understood, and research on how to close these gaps is lacking.”
In 2019, the NIH released an updated SGM definition after consulting with several groups at the agency with “contemporary expertise in SGM health and research.” The revised definition states that:
SGM populations include, but are not limited to, individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, asexual, transgender, Two-Spirit, queer, and/or intersex. Individuals with same-sex or -gender attractions or behaviors and those with a difference in sex development are also included. These populations also encompass those who do not self-identify with one of these terms but whose sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or reproductive development is characterized by non-binary constructs of sexual orientation, gender, and/or sex.2
The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) released a position statement in 2017 on Strategies for Reducing Cancer Health Disparities Among Sexual and Gender Minority Populations.3 The statement includes recommendations in five areas aimed at addressing the needs of both SGM people with cancer and SGM individuals in the oncology workforce:2
- Patient education and support
- Workforce development and diversity
- Quality improvement strategies
- Policy solutions
- Research strategies
ASCO’s statement recommends adoption of the NIH strategic plan for addressing the research needs of SGM populations. To advance research among SGM populations, ASCO recommends championing to promote “inclusion of SGM status as a required data element in cancer registries and clinical trials.”3
At present, these data are still not routinely collected in clinical trials, surveys, or epidemiological studies. Without the ability to identify and reach out to SGM patient populations, research efforts are stymied.
To introduce this issue of the Research Review, we’ve invited 2020 ASCO Young Investigator Award recipient Ash Alpert, MD, MFA, to share their perspective on the path to engaging SGM patients in cancer research. With grant funding from the Conquer Cancer Foundation, Dr. Alpert is working in collaboration with a community advisory board composed of transgender people who have been diagnosed with cancer to develop gender identity data collection tools that are patient-centered and non-stigmatizing as well as to look at connections between violence, including clinician mistreatment, and cancer risk for transgender people. Dr. Alpert is a third-year hematology and medical oncology fellow at the University of Rochester Medical Center’s (URMC) Wilmot Cancer Center.
Before the conversation turned to data collection, Dr. Alpert emphasized the importance of framing the discussion in the broader context of the need for inclusive healthcare services and systems.
Dr. Alpert: It’s important to consider the ways that oncologic healthcare systems and healthcare systems in general render the experiences and identities of sexual and gender minorities invisible. It’s in the fabric of the way we do our day-to-day business . . . in the titles of our clinics, what we mean when we use the word “sex,” what bathrooms are accessible to people, the assumptions we make about the connections between anatomy and gender, the ways we word our intake forms. The list goes on and on.
ACCC: Is greater consideration for the environment of care a step toward reducing barriers that contribute to SGM patients feeling as though there is no place that allows them to be “seen” in our healthcare delivery systems?
Dr. Alpert: There is a lot of subtlety about the ways we explicitly and implicitly communicate a sense of safety for SGM patients in our cancer centers and our clinics . . . [it] includes a lot of things that are institutional and concrete like bathrooms, names of clinics, intake forms, the way we call patients out of the waiting room, the way that we use ID bands, the gowns that we provide, and the ways that we talk about peoples’ bodies. It’s important to think about data collection as part of an overall effort to create a sense of safety and to create real safety as well.
ACCC: Yet data collection is essential so that clinicians are able to identify SGM patients in order to promote research to reduce disparities.
Dr. Alpert: The issue of data collection is complicated because there’s such a strong current moving in the direction of default assumptions around heterosexual and cisgender identities. So, we really have to go out of our way to figure out what the sexual orientation and gender identities (SOGI) of our patients are.
ACCC: Why is data collection important?
Dr. Alpert: Particularly for transgender patients, we have no good data about cancer prevalence or outcomes. We know that transgender people face incredible health disparities across medical settings, but the specific disparities in the context of cancer are unknown. Because of that, there is no good starting place to develop interventions to improve the experiences and outcomes of transgender people [with cancer]. And even if we decided that we knew what would make the experiences of transgender people better, we wouldn’t have any way to benchmark our progress because we wouldn’t know where we’d started. We don’t know what the prevalence of specific cancers are and how those may be impacted by problems accessing preventative and primary care. We don’t know what the disparities in outcomes are, and so we can’t begin to figure out how to make those better. We can’t even track patient engagement in care, which could be a way to understand if interventions that we develop and implement are making care any more accessible for patients.
Because SGM people have the pervasive experience of having our identities feel invisible, [SOGI data collection] can also suggest to patients that we know SGM people exist and that we’re ready to be present and comfortable with them.
On the other hand, a potential pitfall of SOGI data collection is that some transgender patients have had the experience of being asked about gender identify when it isn’t relevant and having gender identity dwelt upon in contexts that aren’t always comfortable for patients. I think we do need to be careful about how we ask and ensure that we are asking questions because they will inform our data or clinical care.
ACCC: It’s a conundrum: The need to collect data while at the same time trying to establish trust and culturally appropriate education for this marginalized patient population.
Dr. Alpert: It is like we’re trying to put our shoes on and run at the same time. Unfortunately, transgender patients face consistent stigmatization across healthcare contexts. We need to start collecting this data so we can begin to improve medical care, however, in some ways, we’re not ready to collect the data because patients are still being so routinely stigmatized.
ACCC: The impetus for your current research grew out of an interest to collect SOGI data at URMC, is that correct?
Dr. Alpert: Yes, I was interested in collecting SOGI data at our cancer center. I went to the community advisory board I work with to talk about it. We talked about the current standard questions in use, which include two questions: one about gender and one about sex assigned-at-birth. The community advisory board didn’t feel comfortable with implementing so-called two-step questions, which have been the only ones that have been tested. The advisory board members] wrote their own questions, and we received a grant from the Conquer Cancer Foundation to further develop and test them. We assembled an expert panel of transgender health researchers, talked through the questions with them, and we are piloting the questions via cognitive interviews with a small group of people. Lastly, we will test them with a survey aimed at patients and providers, which asks respondents to rate how comfortable the questions are to answer, how clear they are, and how much they allow patients to reflect their actual identities. We’ll ask survey participants to evaluate them in comparison to the current questions in use.
ACCC: If we think about community oncology and the many gaps that exist in cancer research and then the gaps specifically for marginalized patient groups, what do you think needs to happen so that trials can be more inclusive?
Dr. Alpert: Throughout history, racist violence has happened under the guise of clinical trials. That remains in our thinking about relating to each other in the context of clinical trials. In order to shift that background, we’re going to need to look to marginalized communities to lead us to creating clinical trials that truly meet their needs both in terms of filling gaps in communal knowledge but also in terms of safety. For SGM populations specifically, there are ongoing issues around language that we could work on improving, which would potentially change people’s relationship to clinical trials.
It would be helpful for all of us to go back to the language of our trials and consider deleting gender-exclusive language. Especially for cancers in which anatomy and gender are often implicitly linked with our language, such as breast cancer, prostate cancer, ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, etc. It will be important to assess the ways we’ve linked gender and anatomy and undo this such that our trials are truly inclusive of transgender people and other people whose anatomy does not match assumptions based on gender. This would also ensure that transgender people don’t need to come out in order to know if they are eligible for the trial.
In the context of clinical trial design, we must also work with marginalized community members to set priorities for clinical trials and design the trials including the exclusion and inclusion criteria. Regarding clinical care, I urge all community practices to build a formal means of getting input from local communities, especially local marginalized community members, regarding how the practices may be meeting or not meeting their needs. If we begin to build deep relationships with the communities we serve, we may be able to do work that’s truly moving toward health justice for all people.
References
- National Institutes of Health. National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparities. Director’s Message. Oct. 6, 2016. Available at https://www.nimhd.nih.gov/about/directors-corner/messages/message_10-06-16.html.
- National Institutes of Health. Sexual and Gender Minority Research Office. “Sexual and Gender Minority Populations in NIH-Supported Research.” Notice Number: NOT-OD-19-139. Released August 28, 2019. Available at https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-19-139.html.
- American Society of Clinical Oncology. American Society of Clinical Oncology Position Statement: Strategies for Reducing Cancer Health Disparities Among Sexual and Gender Minority Populations. J Clin Oncol. 2017;38(19):2203-2208.
Additional Resources
Alpert A, Kamen C, Schabath MB, Hamel L, Seay J, Quinn GP. What exactly are we measuring? Evaluating sexual and gender minority culture humility training for oncology care clinicians. J Clin Oncol. 2020;38(23):2605-2609.
Griggs JJ, Alpert A. Cancer Care for Transgender and Gender-diverse Populations. ASCO elearning course. Available at https://elearning.asco.org/product-details/cancer-care-for-transgender-and-gender-diverse-populations.
Loftus EG. Examining Cancer Health Disparities in the LGBTQ Community. Cancer Research Catalyst. [Blog post] September 22, 2019. American Association for Cancer Research.
National Institutes of Health. National Institutes of Health Sexual and Gender Minority Research Office. NIH FY 2021–2025 Strategic Plan to Advance Research on the Health and Well-being of Sexual and Gender Minorities.
Quinn GP, Alpert AB, Sutter M, Schabath MB. What oncologists should know about treating sexual and gender minority patients with cancer. J Oncol Pract. 2020;16:309-316.
See accompanying commentary:
Griggs JJ. Improving the care of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people with cancer through transformational approaches. J Oncol Pract. 2020;16:317-318.