Clinical breast cancerWan D, Villa D, Woods R, Yerushalmi R, Gelmon K. Breast Cancer subtype variation by race and ethnicity in a diverse population in British Columbia. Clin Breast Cancer 2016;16(3):e49e55.Wan D, Villa D, Woods R, Yerushalmi R, Gelmon K, et al. Breast Cancer ...
Trends in breast cancer incidence rates by race/ethnicity: Patterns by stage, socioeconomic position, and geography in the United States, 1999‐2017 The incidence rate of breast cancer has been increasing over time across race/ethnicity in the United States. It is unclear whether these trends ...
These are the relative survival rates for cancer, broken down by race. Women and those AFAB Number of years since diagnosis Black Hispanic Indian/Alaska Native Asian/Pacific Islander White 1 95% 97.4% 97.3% 98.3% 97.7% 5 80.8% 87.5% 88.1% 91.4% 91.5 The statistics for breast cancer relativ...
but until that point they conclude that doctor-patient communications "offer a good leverage point for interventions to improve chemotherapy patterns in black women and ultimately, to reduce race disparities in breast cancer mortality."
Latinas who spoke little English were less likely to undergo reconstruction surgery after a mastectomy for breast cancer, according to a study from researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Our study also builds on previous work that used SEER Program data, including a study6 evaluating breast cancer stage and survival rates by race between 1973 and 1991. This study also found that black women had poorer breast cancer outcomes, but it was unable to evaluate other races and ethni...
Race-specific impact of natural history, mammography screening, and adjuvant treatment on breast cancer mortality rates in the United States. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2011;20(1):112-122. doi:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-10-0944 PubMedGoogle ScholarCrossref Deconstructing Racial and ...
Rates ofbreast cancerlocoregional recurrence are almost two times higher in Black and Asian women compared with White women, even when patients have equal access to care and equivalent rates of treatment adherence, a recent analysis found.
Cancer Statistics Explorer Network. Breast cancer: US mortality rates by age at death, 2016-2020, by race/ethnicity (based on us mortality data 1969-2020). National Cancer Institute. Published 2022. Accessed February 16, 2023. https://seer.cancer.gov/statistics-network/explorer/application.html ...
Second, the HRQoL effects of breast cancer are concentrated in the first year after diagnosis, with larger effects among women diagnosed at younger ages. Third, there are significant differences in the HRQoL effects of breast cancer by race/ethnicity. Although the HSU decrements were largest in ...