Scott Sasinya N, Lui Michelle L, Houghton Lauren C
Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 722 West 168 Street, Room 706, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
BMC Womens Health. 2025 Apr 10;25(1):168. doi: 10.1186/s12905-025-03677-4.
Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer in women worldwide. Despite it having an etiology that has fixed, genetic as well as modifiable, environmental risk factors, the narrative around breast cancer prevention emphasizes gendered interpretations of the etiology, such as "reproductive factors cause breast cancer" and women should change their behaviors to reduce their risk. Since migrant studies can distinguish environmental from genetic risk factors, we conducted a structured review of migrant studies and assessed prominent cancer website resources to determine evidence of gender bias between breast and prostate cancer.
We searched ten online databases for articles with migration as the exposure and breast cancer mortality and/or incidence as the outcome. We also searched using prostate cancer as the outcome to generate a comparison group. We developed rubrics to categorize the studies by study design (single, double, and time dimensional), convergence (a change in incidence or mortality for the migrant population), and concordance (consistency between results and author-attributed etiology). We used chi-square tests to test for differences by cancer type. We web-scraped four notable cancer websites to extract website layouts, risk factor information, and language describing breast cancer etiology and compared it to the content used for prostate cancer.
Of all 140 studies and 220 comparisons, breast (n = 131) outnumbered prostate cancer studies (n = 89; p-value = 0·005). For both cancers, studies that compared all three populations (the non-migrant, origin, and destination population outcomes) or measured length of stay demonstrated that cancer rates converged with migration. Most authors attributed breast cancer etiology to genetic and environmental factors. Yet, the migrant study results were inconsistent with public health messaging; all four websites framed breast cancer as more modifiable than prostate cancer.
Research efforts and public health messaging for breast cancer should consider gendered barriers to changing individual-level risk factors and develop more prevention strategies at the health systems level.
乳腺癌是全球女性中最常见的癌症。尽管其病因既有固定的、遗传的风险因素,也有可改变的环境风险因素,但围绕乳腺癌预防的说法强调对病因的性别化解读,例如“生殖因素导致乳腺癌”,女性应改变行为以降低风险。由于移民研究可以区分环境风险因素和遗传风险因素,我们对移民研究进行了结构化综述,并评估了著名癌症网站资源,以确定乳腺癌和前列腺癌之间性别偏见的证据。
我们在十个在线数据库中搜索以移民为暴露因素、乳腺癌死亡率和/或发病率为结果的文章。我们还以前列腺癌为结果进行搜索以生成对照组。我们制定了分类标准,根据研究设计(单维度、双维度和时间维度)、趋同性(移民人群发病率或死亡率的变化)和一致性(结果与作者归因病因之间的一致性)对研究进行分类。我们使用卡方检验来检验癌症类型之间的差异。我们对四个著名癌症网站进行网页抓取,以提取网站布局、风险因素信息以及描述乳腺癌病因的语言,并将其与用于前列腺癌的内容进行比较。
在所有140项研究和220次比较中,乳腺癌研究(n = 131)的数量超过前列腺癌研究(n = 89;p值 = 0.005)。对于这两种癌症,比较所有三个人群(非移民、原籍和目的地人群结果)或测量停留时间的研究表明,癌症发病率随着移民而趋同。大多数作者将乳腺癌病因归因于遗传和环境因素。然而,移民研究结果与公共卫生信息不一致;所有四个网站都将乳腺癌描述为比前列腺癌更具可改变性。
乳腺癌的研究工作和公共卫生信息应考虑改变个体层面风险因素的性别障碍,并在卫生系统层面制定更多预防策略。