Department of Health Evidence and Policy, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, 1425 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10029, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2012 Sep;21(9):950-8. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2011.3254. Epub 2012 Jun 25.
In the United States, 5-year breast cancer survival is highest among Asian American women, followed by non-Hispanic white, Hispanic, and African American women. Breast cancer treatment disparities may play a role. We examined racial/ethnic differences in adjuvant hormonal therapy use among women aged 18-64 years, diagnosed with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer, using data collected by the Northern California Breast Cancer Family Registry (NC-BCFR), and explored changes in use over time.
Odds ratios (OR) comparing self-reported ever-use by race/ethnicity (African American, Hispanic, non-Hispanic white vs. Asian American) were estimated using multivariable adjusted logistic regression. Analyses were stratified by recruitment phase (phase I, diagnosed January 1995-September 1998, phase II, diagnosed October 1998-April 2003) and genetic susceptibility, as cases with increased genetic susceptibility were oversampled.
Among 1385 women (731 phase I, 654 phase II), no significant racial/ethnic differences in use were observed among phase I or phase II cases. However, among phase I cases with no susceptibility indicators, African American and non-Hispanic white women were less likely than Asian American women to use hormonal therapy (OR 0.20, 95% confidence interval [CI]0.06-0.60; OR 0.40, CI 0.17-0.94, respectively). No racial/ethnic differences in use were observed among women with 1+ susceptibility indicators from either recruitment phase.
Racial/ethnic differences in adjuvant hormonal therapy use were limited to earlier diagnosis years (phase I) and were attenuated over time. Findings should be confirmed in other populations but indicate that in this population, treatment disparities between African American and Asian American women narrowed over time as adjuvant hormonal treatments became more commonly prescribed.
在美国,亚裔美国女性的 5 年乳腺癌生存率最高,其次是非西班牙裔白人、西班牙裔和非裔美国女性。乳腺癌治疗差异可能在此发挥作用。我们使用北加州乳腺癌家族登记处(NC-BCFR)收集的数据,研究了年龄在 18-64 岁之间、被诊断患有激素受体阳性乳腺癌的女性使用辅助激素治疗的种族/族裔差异,并探讨了随时间的变化。
使用多变量调整后的逻辑回归估计了按种族/族裔(非裔美国人、西班牙裔、非西班牙裔白人与亚裔美国人)报告的既往使用率比较的比值比(OR)。分析按招募阶段(阶段 I,1995 年 1 月至 1998 年 9 月诊断,阶段 II,1998 年 10 月至 2003 年 4 月诊断)和遗传易感性进行分层,因为具有增加的遗传易感性的病例被过度抽样。
在 1385 名女性(731 名阶段 I,654 名阶段 II)中,在阶段 I 或阶段 II 病例中未观察到使用方面的显著种族/族裔差异。然而,在没有易感性指标的阶段 I 病例中,非裔美国人和非西班牙裔白人女性使用激素治疗的可能性低于亚裔美国女性(OR 0.20,95%置信区间 [CI]0.06-0.60;OR 0.40,CI 0.17-0.94)。在两个招募阶段均有 1 个以上易感性指标的女性中,未观察到使用方面的种族/族裔差异。
辅助激素治疗使用方面的种族/族裔差异仅限于较早的诊断年份(阶段 I),且随时间而减弱。这些发现应在其他人群中得到证实,但表明在该人群中,随着辅助激素治疗的应用越来越普遍,非裔美国人和亚裔美国女性之间的治疗差异随时间的推移而缩小。