Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of California at Irvine Medical Center, Orange, CA, USA.
Gynecol Oncol. 2013 Sep;130(3):652-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2013.05.020. Epub 2013 May 23.
The objective of this article is to comprehensively review the scientific literature and summarize the available data regarding the outcome disparities of African American women with uterine cancer.
Literature on disparities in uterine cancer was systematically reviewed using the PubMed search engine. Articles from 1992 to 2012 written in English were reviewed. Search terms included endometrial cancer, uterine cancer, racial disparities, and African American.
Twenty-four original research articles with a total of 366,299 cases of endometrial cancer (337,597 Caucasian and 28,702 African American) were included. Compared to Caucasian women, African American women comprise 7% of new endometrial cancer cases, while accounting for approximately 14% of endometrial cancer deaths. They are diagnosed with later stage, higher-grade disease, and poorer prognostic histologic types compared to their Caucasian counterparts. They also suffer worse outcomes at every stage, grade, and for every histologic type. The cause of increased mortality is multifactorial. African American and white women have varying incidence of comorbid conditions, genetic susceptibility to malignancy, access to care and health coverage, and socioeconomic status; however, the most consistent contributors to incidence and mortality disparities are histology and socioeconomics. More robust genetic and molecular profile studies are in development to further explain histologic differences.
Current studies suggest that histologic and socioeconomic factors explain much of the disparity in endometrial cancer incidence and mortality between white and African American patients. Treatment factors likely contributed historically to differences in mortality; however, studies suggest most women now receive equal care. Molecular differences may be an important factor to explain the racial inequities. Coupled with a sustained commitment to increasing access to appropriate care, on-going research in biologic mechanisms underlying histopathologic differences will help address and reduce the number of African American women who disproportionately suffer and die from endometrial malignancy.
本文旨在全面回顾科学文献,总结关于非裔美国妇女子宫癌结局差异的现有数据。
使用 PubMed 搜索引擎系统地回顾了关于子宫癌差异的文献。综述了 1992 年至 2012 年期间以英文发表的文章。检索词包括子宫内膜癌、子宫癌、种族差异和非裔美国人。
共纳入 24 篇原始研究文章,总计 366,299 例子宫内膜癌病例(337,597 例白人和 28,702 例非裔美国人)。与白人女性相比,非裔美国女性占新发子宫内膜癌病例的 7%,但约占子宫内膜癌死亡人数的 14%。与白人女性相比,她们的诊断分期较晚、肿瘤分级较高、预后组织学类型较差。在每一个分期、分级和组织学类型中,她们的预后也更差。死亡率增加的原因是多方面的。非裔美国人和白人女性患有合并症的情况不同、对恶性肿瘤的遗传易感性不同、获得医疗保健的机会和医疗保险覆盖范围不同、社会经济地位不同;然而,导致发病率和死亡率差异的最一致因素是组织学和社会经济学。目前正在进行更强大的遗传和分子谱研究,以进一步解释组织学差异。
目前的研究表明,组织学和社会经济学因素解释了白人和非裔美国患者子宫内膜癌发病率和死亡率差异的大部分原因。治疗因素可能是导致死亡率差异的历史原因;然而,研究表明,现在大多数女性都接受了同等的治疗。分子差异可能是解释种族不平等的一个重要因素。加上持续致力于增加获得适当治疗的机会,对组织病理学差异背后的生物学机制的持续研究将有助于解决并减少不成比例地遭受和死于子宫内膜癌的非裔美国妇女的数量。