Smith-Bindman Rebecca, Miglioretti Diana L, Lurie Nicole, Abraham Linn, Barbash Rachel Ballard, Strzelczyk Jodi, Dignan Mark, Barlow William E, Beasley Cherry M, Kerlikowske Karla
University of California and San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94115, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2006 Apr 18;144(8):541-53. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-144-8-200604180-00004.
Reasons for persistent differences in breast cancer mortality rates among various racial and ethnic groups have been difficult to ascertain.
To determine reasons for disparities in breast cancer outcomes across racial and ethnic groups.
Prospective cohort.
The authors pooled data from 7 mammography registries that participate in the National Cancer Institute-funded Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium. Cancer diagnoses were ascertained through linkage with pathology databases; Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results programs; and state tumor registries.
1,010,515 women 40 years of age and older who had at least 1 mammogram between 1996 and 2002; 17,558 of these women had diagnosed breast cancer.
Patterns of mammography and the probability of inadequate mammography screening were examined. The authors evaluated whether overall and advanced cancer rates were similar across racial and ethnic groups and whether these rates were affected by the use of mammography.
African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American women were more likely than white women to have received inadequate mammographic screening (relative risk, 1.2 [95% CI, 1.2 to 1.2], 1.3 [CI, 1.2 to 1.3], 1.4 [CI, 1.3 to 1.4], and 1.2 [CI, 1.1 to 1.2] respectively). African-American women were more likely than white, Asian, and Native American women to have large, advanced-stage, high-grade, and lymph node-positive tumors of the breast. The observed differences in advanced cancer rates between African American and white women were attenuated or eliminated after the cohort was stratified by screening history. Among women who were previously screened at intervals of 4 to 41 months, African-American women were no more likely to have large, advanced-stage tumors or lymph node involvement than white women with the same screening history. African-American women had higher rates of high-grade tumors than white women regardless of screening history. The lower rates of advanced cancer among Asian and Native American women persisted when the cohort was stratified by mammography history.
Results are based on a cohort of women who had received mammographic evaluations.
African-American women are less likely to receive adequate mammographic screening than white women, which may explain the higher prevalence of advanced breast tumors among African-American women. Tumor characteristics may also contribute to differences in cancer outcomes because African-American women have higher-grade tumors than white women regardless of screening. These results suggest that adherence to recommended mammography screening intervals may reduce breast cancer mortality rates.
不同种族和族裔群体乳腺癌死亡率持续存在差异的原因一直难以确定。
确定不同种族和族裔群体乳腺癌结局存在差异的原因。
前瞻性队列研究。
作者汇总了7个乳房X线摄影登记处的数据,这些登记处参与了美国国立癌症研究所资助的乳腺癌监测联盟。通过与病理数据库、监测、流行病学和最终结果计划以及州肿瘤登记处的数据链接来确定癌症诊断。
1,010,515名40岁及以上的女性,她们在1996年至2002年间至少进行了1次乳房X线摄影检查;其中17,558名女性被诊断患有乳腺癌。
检查乳房X线摄影模式和乳房X线摄影筛查不足的概率。作者评估了不同种族和族裔群体的总体癌症和晚期癌症发生率是否相似,以及这些发生率是否受到乳房X线摄影使用情况的影响。
非裔美国女性、西班牙裔女性、亚裔女性和美国原住民女性比白人女性更有可能接受不足的乳房X线摄影筛查(相对风险分别为1.2 [95%可信区间,1.2至1.2]、1.3 [可信区间,1.2至1.3]、1.4 [可信区间,1.3至1.4]和1.2 [可信区间,1.1至1.2])。非裔美国女性比白人、亚裔和美国原住民女性更有可能患有体积大、分期晚、分级高和淋巴结阳性的乳腺肿瘤。在根据筛查史对队列进行分层后,非裔美国女性和白人女性在晚期癌症发生率上的观察到的差异减弱或消除。在之前筛查间隔为4至41个月的女性中,非裔美国女性与具有相同筛查史的白人女性相比,患体积大、分期晚的肿瘤或淋巴结受累的可能性并不更高。无论筛查史如何,非裔美国女性的高级别肿瘤发生率均高于白人女性。当根据乳房X线摄影史对队列进行分层时,亚裔和美国原住民女性的晚期癌症发生率较低的情况仍然存在。
结果基于一组接受过乳房X线摄影评估的女性。
与白人女性相比,非裔美国女性接受充分乳房X线摄影筛查的可能性较小,这可能解释了非裔美国女性中晚期乳腺肿瘤患病率较高的原因。肿瘤特征也可能导致癌症结局的差异,因为无论筛查情况如何,非裔美国女性的肿瘤分级均高于白人女性。这些结果表明,坚持推荐的乳房X线摄影筛查间隔可能会降低乳腺癌死亡率。