Health & Medicine - Posted by Dorsey Griffith-UC Davis on Wednesday, April 7, 2010 15:03 - 4 Comments    
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Black women with breast cancer fare worse

breastcancer

While Hispanic and African-American women with advanced breast cancer are less likely to receive radiation therapy than their white counterparts, only African American women have poorer outcomes than white patients with the same stage disease. The findings suggest that the lack of radiation therapy treatment is not solely responsible for the poorer survival noted among African-American patients and other factors are involved. Credit: Courtesy, iStockphoto

UC DAVIS (US)—African-American women who get breast cancer have poorer survival rates than their white and Hispanic counterparts regardless of whether they receive radiation therapy following lumpectomy or mastectomy.





Steve Martinez, assistant professor of surgery at the University of California, Davis Cancer Center, says that while Hispanic and African-American women with advanced breast cancer are less likely to receive radiation therapy than their white counterparts, only African Americans have poorer outcomes than white patients with the same stage disease.

The findings suggest that the lack of radiation therapy treatment is not responsible for the poorer survival noted among African-American patients.

“Is this a biological difference?” Martinez asks. “Do black patients benefit from post-surgery radiation therapy to the degree that Hispanics and whites benefit?”

The current study is one of two Martinez undertook to examine factors influencing survival for breast cancer patients.

In the first, he looked at data from more than 12,000 women from throughout the country who had breast cancer that had spread to 10 or more lymph nodes and that had resulted in either lumpectomy or mastectomy.

“By definition, all of these patients should get radiation therapy,” he says.

What he found was that black patients were about 24 percent less likely to receive radiation therapy as their white counterparts. Hispanic patients were about 20 percent less likely to get radiation therapy.

For the second study, he wanted to learn whether the disparities in receipt of radiation therapy resulted in poorer outcomes for Hispanic and African-American women.

“That is not what we found,” he says. “Hispanic patients were not significantly different from white patients in overall survival rates, but black patients did worse.

“This survival disparity seen in black patients was unrelated to whether or not they received radiation therapy as part of their treatment.”

Martinez examined 10-year survival rates in patients from each group who received radiation therapy and those who did not. While he found dramatic differences in survival for white women who had radiation therapy (an 11 percent survival boost), black patients had just a 3 percent difference in their survival rates.

Martinez plans to continue his research into factors that may influence whether or not patients receive radiation therapy and that may also affect their outcomes, including possible biological differences.

“We are trying to see which treatments work best for which people,” he says. “Ultimately, we can figure out treatments that may work well for you, but not for someone else. This is a step on that path.”

UC Davis  news: http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/

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4 Comments

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Graciela Rogerio
Apr 8, 2010 10:31

Has this study been published? If so, where? Also, what was the data base used in this study? Thank you.

David Corriveau
Apr 8, 2010 13:08

For another perspective on disparities in cancer survival rates, visit http://dms.dartmouth.edu/news/2010/03/22_onega.shtml.

Alberto
Apr 8, 2010 15:18

A colleague of mine served as chairperson on a study dubbed Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, concducted by the National Business Group on Health http://www.minorityhealth.hhs.gov/Assets/pdf/checked/1/Eliminating_Racial_Ethnic_Health_Disparities_A_Business_Case_Update_for_Employers.pdf

Steve R. Martinez
Apr 8, 2010 17:00

Graciela, this study has been published in abstract format in the journal Clinical and Translational Science (Volume 3, issue 2, pages S31-S32). The data used in the study was from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End-Results (SEER) database provided by the National Cancer Institute.

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