Abstract
Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is a common hematologic neoplasm in adults and usually carries a grim prognosis. Therapy has traditionally consisted of intensive chemotherapy; however, recent advances have led to the development of Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKI) as Targeted Therapies for subtypes carrying certain mutations. While the clinical impact of these therapies has been well described, there have been no studies looking at clinical disparities among different racial/ethnic groups receiving these therapies. We leveraged an EHR-derived database to evaluate real-world outcomes in patients receiving TKIs for AML. Our study found no significant differences between real-world Event Free Survival (rwEFS) and real world Overall Survival (rwOS) across patients of different racial/ethnic groups, this suggests that when patients have access to targeted therapy outcomes across different racial/ethnic groups become more equitable.