The University of Sydney, Sydney Health Literacy Lab, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, New South Wales Australia; Wiser Healthcare, School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Breast. 2024 Apr;74:103693. doi: 10.1016/j.breast.2024.103693. Epub 2024 Feb 22.
High breast density is an independent risk factor for breast cancer and decreases the sensitivity of mammography. This systematic review synthesizes the evidence on the impact of breast density (BD) information and/or notification on women's psychosocial outcomes among women from racial and ethnic minority groups.
A systematic search was performed in March 2023, and the articles were identified using CINHAL, Embase, Medline, and PsychInfo databases. The search strategy combined the terms "breast", "density", "notification" and synonyms. The authors specifically kept the search terms broad and did not include terms related to race and ethnicity. Full-text articles were reviewed for analysis by race, ethnicity and primary language of participants. Two authors evaluated the eligibility of studies with verification from the study team, extracted and crosschecked data, and assessed the risk of bias.
Of 1784 articles, 32 articles published from 2003 to 2023 were included. Thirty-one studies were conducted in the United States and one in Australia, with 28 quantitative and four qualitative methodologies. The overall results in terms of breast density awareness, knowledge, communication with healthcare professionals, screening intentions and supplemental screening practice were heterogenous across studies. Barriers to understanding BD notifications and intentions/access to supplemental screening among racial and ethnic minorities included socioeconomic factors, language, health literacy and medical mistrust.
A one-size approach to inform women about their BD may further disadvantage racial and ethnic minority women. BD notification and accompanying information should be tailored and translated to ensure readability and understandability by all women.
高乳腺密度是乳腺癌的一个独立危险因素,降低了乳房 X 光检查的敏感性。本系统评价综合了来自不同种族和族裔群体的女性中乳腺密度(BD)信息和/或通知对女性心理社会结局影响的证据。
2023 年 3 月进行了系统检索,并使用 CINHAL、Embase、Medline 和 PsychInfo 数据库确定了文章。搜索策略结合了“乳房”、“密度”、“通知”和同义词的术语。作者特别将搜索词保持在广泛的范围内,并且不包括与种族和族裔相关的术语。对种族、族裔和参与者的主要语言进行了全文文章的分析。两名作者对研究进行了资格评估,与研究团队进行了验证,并提取和交叉核对了数据,评估了偏倚风险。
在 1784 篇文章中,有 32 篇文章于 2003 年至 2023 年发表。31 项研究在美国进行,1 项在澳大利亚进行,采用 28 项定量和 4 项定性方法。就乳腺密度意识、知识、与医疗保健专业人员的沟通、筛查意向和补充筛查实践而言,研究结果总体上存在异质性。理解 BD 通知以及少数民族和族裔群体的意向/获得补充筛查的障碍包括社会经济因素、语言、健康素养和医疗不信任。
针对女性的 BD 进行一刀切的通知可能会使少数民族和族裔女性进一步处于不利地位。BD 通知和伴随的信息应该进行调整和翻译,以确保所有女性都能阅读和理解。