Hershman Dawn, Weinberg Mitchell, Rosner Zachary, Alexis Karenza, Tiersten Amy, Grann Victor R, Troxel Andrea, Neugut Alfred I
Department of Medicine and the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2003 Oct 15;95(20):1545-8. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djg073.
Disparities in breast cancer survival have been observed between African American and white women. There are also known differences in mean baseline white blood cell (WBC) count among racial and ethnic groups. If the WBC count falls below conventionally defined treatment thresholds for patients undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy, reduced doses or treatment delays may occur, which could lead to race-based differences in treatment duration. We used the tumor registry at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center to identify 1178 women with newly diagnosed stage I and II breast cancer from whom we collected base-line information for 73 African American women and 126 age- and tumor stage-matched white women. Of these women, 43 African American and 93 white women underwent adjuvant chemotherapy. African American women had statistically significantly lower WBC counts than white women at diagnosis (6.2 x 10(9)/L for African American women versus 7.4 x 10(9)/L for white women, difference = 1.2, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.2 to 1.2; P =.02) and after treatment (5.3 x 10(9)/L for African American women versus 6.4 x 10(9)/L for white women, difference = 1.1, 95% CI = 0.2 to 2.5; P =.03). Overall, African American women required a statistically significantly longer duration of treatment than white women (19 weeks versus 15 weeks, respectively, difference = 4 weeks, 95% CI = 0.5 to 7.2 weeks; P =.03). The lower baseline WBC counts and longer duration of treatment for early-stage breast cancer in African American women compared with those in white women result in lower dose intensity of treatment for African American women, possibly contributing to observed racial differences in breast cancer survival.
非裔美国女性和白人女性在乳腺癌生存率方面存在差异。种族和族裔群体之间的平均基线白细胞(WBC)计数也存在已知差异。如果接受辅助化疗的患者白细胞计数低于传统定义的治疗阈值,可能会出现剂量减少或治疗延迟,这可能导致治疗持续时间上的种族差异。我们利用哥伦比亚长老会医学中心的肿瘤登记处,识别出1178名新诊断为I期和II期乳腺癌的女性,从中收集了73名非裔美国女性以及126名年龄和肿瘤分期匹配的白人女性的基线信息。在这些女性中,43名非裔美国女性和93名白人女性接受了辅助化疗。非裔美国女性在诊断时的白细胞计数在统计学上显著低于白人女性(非裔美国女性为6.2×10⁹/L,白人女性为7.4×10⁹/L,差异 = 1.2,95%置信区间[CI] = 0.2至1.2;P = 0.02),治疗后也是如此(非裔美国女性为5.3×10⁹/L,白人女性为6.4×10⁹/L,差异 = 1.1,95%CI = 0.2至2.5;P = 0.03)。总体而言,非裔美国女性所需的治疗持续时间在统计学上显著长于白人女性(分别为19周和15周,差异 = 4周,95%CI = 0.5至7.2周;P = 0.03)。与白人女性相比,非裔美国女性早期乳腺癌的基线白细胞计数较低且治疗持续时间较长,这导致非裔美国女性的治疗剂量强度较低,这可能是观察到的乳腺癌生存率种族差异的原因之一。