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      Racial disparity in survival from estrogen and progesterone receptor positive breast cancer: implications for reducing breast cancer mortality disparities

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          Abstract

          Introduction

          Non-Latina black breast cancer patients experience a shorter survival from breast cancer than their non-Latina white counterparts. We compared breast cancer specific survival for the subset of black and white patients with estrogen and/or progesterone receptor positive tumors that are generally targeted with endocrine therapy.

          Methods

          Using data collected from a population-based cohort of breast cancer patients from Chicago, IL, Kaplan Meier survival curves and hazard functions were generated and proportional hazards models were estimated to determine the black/white disparity in time to death from breast cancer while adjusting for age at diagnosis, patient characteristics, treatment-related variables, and tumor grade and stage.

          Results

          In regression models, hazard of breast cancer death among ER/PR positive patients was at least 4 times higher for black than for white patients in all models tested. Notably, even after adjusting for stage at diagnosis, tumor grade, and treatment variables (including initiation of systemic adjuvant therapies), the hazard ratio for death from ER/PR positive breast cancer between black and white women was 4.39 (95% CI: 1.76, 10.9, p=0.001).

          Conclusions

          We observed a racial disparity in breast cancer survival for patients diagnosed with ER/PR positive tumors that did not appear to be due to differences in tumor stage, grade or therapy initiation in black patients, suggesting that there may be racial differences in the molecular characteristics of hormone receptor positive tumors, such that ER/PR positive tumors in black patients may be less responsive to standard treatments.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          8111104
          1254
          Breast Cancer Res Treat
          Breast Cancer Res. Treat.
          Breast cancer research and treatment
          0167-6806
          1573-7217
          18 March 2017
          01 March 2017
          June 2017
          01 June 2018
          : 163
          : 2
          : 321-330
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago, MC 923, Chicago, IL 60612, USA
          [2 ]Institute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
          [3 ]Department of Public Health Sciences, Loyola University; and Center of Innovation for Complex Chronic Healthcare, Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital
          [4 ]College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
          [5 ]Department of Physiology and Biophysics, College of Medicine
          [6 ]Departments of Medicine and Pathology, College of Medicine
          [7 ]Division of Hematology/Oncology, College of Medicine
          Article
          PMC5410404 PMC5410404 5410404 nihpa856807
          10.1007/s10549-017-4166-z
          5410404
          28251385
          692772f2-d2cc-404d-bc2f-ce5edbeab0a2
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Breast cancer,Disparities,Race/ethnicity,Survival
          Breast cancer, Disparities, Race/ethnicity, Survival

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