McCarthy E P, Burns R B, Coughlin S S, Freund K M, Rice J, Marwill S L, Ash A, Shwartz M, Moskowitz M A
Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Management, Massachusetts 02118, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 1998 May 1;128(9):729-36. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-128-9-199805010-00005.
Older black women are less likely to undergo mammography and are more often given a diagnosis of advanced-stage breast cancer than older white women.
To investigate the extent to which previous mammography explains observed differences in cancer stage at diagnosis between older black and white women with breast cancer.
Retrospective cohort study using the Linked Medicare-Tumor Registry Database.
Population-based data from three geographic areas of the United States included in the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program (Connecticut; metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia; and Seattle-Puget Sound, Washington).
Black and white women 67 years of age and older in whom breast cancer was diagnosed between 1987 and 1989.
Medicare claims were used to classify women according to mammography use in the 2 years before diagnosis as nonusers (no previous mammography), regular users (> or =2 mammographies done at least 10 months apart), or peri-diagnosis users (mammography done only within 3 months before diagnosis). Information on mammography use was linked with SEER data to determine cancer stage at diagnosis. Stage was classified as early (in situ or local) or late (regional or distant).
Black women were more likely to not undergo mammography (odds ratio [OR], 3.00 [95% CI, 2.41 to 3.75]) and to be given a diagnosis of late-stage disease (OR, 2.49 [CI, 1.59 to 3.92]) than white women. When women were stratified by previous mammography use, the black-white difference in cancer stage occurred only among nonusers (adjusted OR, 2.54 [CI, 1.37 to 4.71]). Among regular users, cancer was diagnosed in black and white women at similar stages (adjusted OR, 1.34 [CI, 0.40 to 4.51]). In logistic modeling, previous mammography alone explained about 30% of the excess late-stage disease in black women. In a separate model, previous mammography explained 12% of the excess late-stage disease among black women after adjustment for sociodemographic and comorbidity information.
Differences in breast cancer stage at diagnosis between older black and white women are related to previous mammography use. Increased regular use of mammography may result in a shift toward earlier-stage disease at diagnosis and narrow the observed differences in stage at diagnosis between older black and white women.
与老年白人女性相比,老年黑人女性接受乳房X光检查的可能性较小,且更常被诊断为晚期乳腺癌。
调查既往乳房X光检查在多大程度上解释了老年黑人与白人乳腺癌女性在诊断时癌症分期上的差异。
使用医疗保险与肿瘤登记关联数据库进行的回顾性队列研究。
来自美国三个地理区域的基于人群的数据,这些数据包含在国家癌症研究所的监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)计划中(康涅狄格州;佐治亚州亚特兰大大都市;华盛顿州西雅图-普吉特海湾)。
1987年至1989年间被诊断患有乳腺癌的67岁及以上的黑人和白人女性。
医疗保险理赔数据用于根据诊断前2年的乳房X光检查使用情况将女性分类为未使用者(既往未进行乳房X光检查)、常规使用者(至少间隔10个月进行≥2次乳房X光检查)或诊断周边使用者(仅在诊断前3个月内进行乳房X光检查)。乳房X光检查使用信息与SEER数据相关联,以确定诊断时的癌症分期。分期分为早期(原位或局部)或晚期(区域或远处)。
与白人女性相比,黑人女性更有可能未接受乳房X光检查(比值比[OR],3.00[95%CI,2.41至3.75]),且更有可能被诊断为晚期疾病(OR,2.49[CI,1.59至3.92])。当根据既往乳房X光检查使用情况对女性进行分层时,癌症分期的黑白差异仅在未使用者中出现(调整后的OR,2.54[CI,1.37至4.71])。在常规使用者中,黑人和白人女性被诊断出癌症的分期相似(调整后的OR,1.34[CI,0.40至4.51])。在逻辑模型中,仅既往乳房X光检查就解释了黑人女性中约30%的晚期疾病超额情况。在一个单独的模型中,在调整社会人口统计学和合并症信息后,既往乳房X光检查解释了黑人女性中12%的晚期疾病超额情况。
老年黑人和白人女性在诊断时乳腺癌分期的差异与既往乳房X光检查的使用情况有关。增加乳房X光检查的常规使用可能会导致诊断时向早期疾病转变,并缩小老年黑人和白人女性在诊断时观察到的分期差异。