McBride Russell, Hershman Dawn, Tsai Wei-Yann, Jacobson Judith S, Grann Victor, Neugut Alfred I
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, New York, New York, USA.
Cancer. 2007 Sep 15;110(6):1201-8. doi: 10.1002/cncr.22884.
Black women have higher breast cancer mortality rates, are more likely to be diagnosed at an advanced stage of disease, and have worse stage-for-stage survival than white women. It was hypothesized that differences in the tumor size and number of positive lymph nodes within each disease stage contribute to the survival disparity.
In the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, black and white women diagnosed with a first primary tumor (TNM stage I-IIIA breast cancer) between 1988 and 2003 were identified. The demographic and clinical characteristics were compared by race. Logistic regression models of the association between race and tumor size and lymph node status were developed. Cox proportional hazards models of the association between mortality and race, tumor size, lymph node status, and other covariates were also examined.
Among 256,174 SEER cases (21,861 black and 234,313 white women), more black than white women with lymph node-negative breast cancer had tumors measuring >or=2.0 cm. Adjusted for tumor size, more black than white women had >or=1 positive lymph nodes (odds ratio [OR], 1.24; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.20-1.28). The age-adjusted and TNM stage-adjusted mortality rate ratio for blacks versus whites was 1.56 (95% CI, 1.51-1.61). Adjustment for within-stage differences in tumor size and lymph node involvement were found to have a negligible effect. With adjustment for additional covariates, the rate ratio was 1.39 (95% CI, 1.35-1.44). In addition, the rate ratio reflecting racial disparity increased as the stage of disease increased. CONCLUSIONS.: Adjusting for within-stage differences in tumor size and lymph node status did not appear to reduce the racial disparity. The finding that disparities increased with higher stage of disease suggests that interventions aimed at reducing these differences should target women with more advanced disease.
黑人女性乳腺癌死亡率更高,更有可能在疾病晚期被诊断出来,且与白人女性相比,在相同疾病分期下的生存率更低。据推测,各疾病分期内肿瘤大小和阳性淋巴结数量的差异导致了生存差异。
在国立癌症研究所的监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)数据库中,识别出1988年至2003年间被诊断为原发性肿瘤(TNM I-IIIA期乳腺癌)的黑人和白人女性。按种族比较人口统计学和临床特征。建立了种族与肿瘤大小及淋巴结状态之间关联的逻辑回归模型。还检验了死亡率与种族、肿瘤大小、淋巴结状态及其他协变量之间关联的Cox比例风险模型。
在256,174例SEER病例(21,861名黑人女性和234,313名白人女性)中,淋巴结阴性乳腺癌患者中肿瘤大小≥2.0 cm的黑人女性比白人女性更多。调整肿瘤大小后,有≥1个阳性淋巴结的黑人女性比白人女性更多(优势比[OR]为1.24;95%置信区间[95%CI]为1.20 - 1.28)。黑人与白人的年龄调整和TNM分期调整后的死亡率比为1.56(95%CI为1.51 - 1.61)。发现调整分期内肿瘤大小和淋巴结受累情况的差异影响可忽略不计。调整其他协变量后,率比为1.39(95%CI为1.35 - 1.44)。此外,反映种族差异的率比随着疾病分期增加而升高。结论:调整分期内肿瘤大小和淋巴结状态的差异似乎并未降低种族差异。差异随疾病分期升高而增加这一发现表明,旨在减少这些差异的干预措施应针对疾病更晚期的女性。