McClelland Shearwood, Page Brandi R, Jaboin Jerry J, Chapman Christina H, Deville Curtiland, Thomas Charles R
Department of Radiation Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Department of Radiation Oncology and Molecular Radiation Sciences, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland.
Adv Radiat Oncol. 2017 Aug 3;2(4):523-531. doi: 10.1016/j.adro.2017.07.002. eCollection 2017 Oct-Dec.
African Americans experience the highest burden of cancer incidence and mortality in the United States and have been persistently less likely to receive interventional care, even when such care has been proven superior to conservative management by randomized controlled trials. The presence of disparities in access to radiation therapy (RT) for African American cancer patients has rarely been examined in an expansive fashion.
An extensive literature search was performed using the PubMed database to examine studies investigating disparities in RT access for African Americans.
A total of 55 studies were found, spanning 11 organ systems. Disparities in access to RT for African Americans were most prominently study in cancers of the breast (23 studies), prostate (7 studies), gynecologic system (5 studies), and hematologic system (5 studies). Disparities in RT access for African Americans were prevalent regardless of organ system studied and often occurred independently of socioeconomic status. Fifty of 55 studies (91%) involved analysis of a population-based database such as Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Result (SEER; 26 studies), SEER-Medicare (5 studies), National Cancer Database (3 studies), or a state tumor registry (13 studies).
African Americans in the United States have diminished access to RT compared with Caucasian patients, independent of but often in concert with low socioeconomic status. These findings underscore the importance of finding systemic and systematic solutions to address these inequalities to reduce the barriers that patient race provides in receipt of optimal cancer care.
非裔美国人在美国面临着最高的癌症发病率和死亡率负担,并且一直以来接受介入治疗的可能性较低,即便随机对照试验已证明这种治疗优于保守治疗。非裔美国癌症患者在获得放射治疗(RT)方面存在的差异很少以全面的方式进行研究。
使用PubMed数据库进行了广泛的文献检索,以审查调查非裔美国人在获得RT方面差异的研究。
共发现55项研究,涵盖11个器官系统。非裔美国人在获得RT方面的差异在乳腺癌(23项研究)、前列腺癌(7项研究)、妇科系统癌症(5项研究)和血液系统癌症(5项研究)中研究得最为突出。无论所研究的器官系统如何,非裔美国人在获得RT方面的差异都很普遍,并且常常独立于社会经济地位出现。55项研究中的50项(91%)涉及对基于人群的数据库的分析,如监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER;26项研究)、SEER-医疗保险(5项研究)、国家癌症数据库(3项研究)或州肿瘤登记处(13项研究)。
与白人患者相比,美国的非裔美国人获得RT的机会减少,这与社会经济地位低无关,但往往与之相关。这些发现强调了找到系统性解决方案来解决这些不平等问题的重要性,以减少患者种族在接受最佳癌症治疗方面所造成的障碍。