Publications
Publications
- February 2024
- Quarterly Journal of Economics
Representation and Extrapolation: Evidence from Clinical Trials
By: Marcella Alsan, Maya Durvasula, Harsh Gupta, Joshua Schwartzstein and Heidi L. Williams
Abstract
This article examines the consequences and causes of low enrollment of Black patients in clinical
trials. We develop a simple model of similarity-based extrapolation that predicts that evidence is
more relevant for decision-making by physicians and patients when it is more representative of
the group that is being treated. This generates the key result that the perceived benefit of a
medicine for a group depends not only on the average benefit from a trial, but also on the share of
patients from that group who were enrolled in the trial. In survey experiments, we find that
physicians who care for Black patients are more willing to prescribe drugs tested in representative
samples, an effect substantial enough to close observed gaps in the prescribing rates of new
medicines. Black patients update more on drug efficacy when the sample that the drug is tested
on is more representative, reducing Black-White patient gaps in beliefs about whether the drug
will work as described. Despite these benefits of representative data, our framework predicts that
those who have benefited more from past medical breakthroughs are less costly to enroll in the
present, leading to persistence in who is represented in the evidence base.
Keywords
Representation; Racial Disparity; Health Testing and Trials; Race; Equality and Inequality; Innovation and Invention; Pharmaceutical Industry
Citation
Alsan, Marcella, Maya Durvasula, Harsh Gupta, Joshua Schwartzstein, and Heidi L. Williams. "Representation and Extrapolation: Evidence from Clinical Trials." Quarterly Journal of Economics 139, no. 1 (February 2024): 575–635.