Hill Aaron J, Durbha Naren, Eaglehouse Yvonne L, Hong Y Alicia, Xue Hong
Murtha Cancer Center Research Program, Department of Surgery, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, 20817, USA.
Department of Preventive Medicine & Biostatistics, F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, 20814, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2025 Mar 27. doi: 10.1007/s11764-025-01791-8.
This study uses systematic review and meta-analysis to address whether the significant disparities in breast cancer (BC) related health outcomes between Black and White women in the U.S. exist for women treated in the equal access Military Health System (MHS).
PubMed, CINAHL, and Web of Science were searched using PRISMA guidelines in February-March 2024 for articles published between 2014-2024 containing quantitative mortality outcomes for Black and White women with BC treated in the MHS. Summarized mortality risk was computed using random effects meta-analysis from 2 × 2 tables of total deaths and population. Search, study selection, and quality assessment were completed by two independent co-authors.
Six studies with samples ranging from 395 to 28,818 across 31 years of data were included, and their mortality findings synthesized. Compared to matched patients in the general population, both Black and White women treated in the MHS had reduced mortality risk in two studies. While unadjusted mortality risk varied across three studies with direct comparisons between Black and White women treated in the MHS, adjusting for demographic and cancer characteristics eliminated significant differences. Meta-analysis of all six studies revealed a higher pooled unadjusted mortality risk for Black compared to White women (OR: 1.20, 95% CI: 1.09-1.33).
Equal access to health care alone may not eliminate racial disparities in mortality for patients with BC.
Improving access, in combination with other targeted interventions, may reduce disparities in health outcomes for women with BC.
本研究采用系统评价和荟萃分析,以探讨在美国平等医疗的军事卫生系统(MHS)接受治疗的黑人女性和白人女性之间,在乳腺癌(BC)相关健康结局方面是否存在显著差异。
按照PRISMA指南,于2024年2月至3月在PubMed、CINAHL和科学网中检索2014年至2024年发表的文章,这些文章包含在MHS接受治疗的黑人与白人BC女性的定量死亡率结局。使用总死亡人数和人口的2×2表格,通过随机效应荟萃分析计算汇总死亡率风险。检索、研究选择和质量评估由两名独立的共同作者完成。
纳入了六项研究,样本量在395至28,818之间,涵盖31年的数据,并综合了它们的死亡率研究结果。与普通人群中的匹配患者相比,在两项研究中,MHS中接受治疗的黑人女性和白人女性的死亡率风险均有所降低。虽然在三项对MHS中接受治疗的黑人与白人女性进行直接比较的研究中,未经调整的死亡率风险有所不同,但在调整人口统计学和癌症特征后,显著差异消失。对所有六项研究的荟萃分析显示,与白人女性相比,黑人女性的汇总未调整死亡率风险更高(OR:1.20,95%CI:1.09 - 1.33)。
仅平等获得医疗保健可能无法消除BC患者死亡率方面的种族差异。
改善医疗可及性,并结合其他有针对性的干预措施,可能会减少BC女性健康结局方面的差异。