 |  | 

ABSTRACT: Hormone Receptors in Breast Cancer: Racial Differences
in Distribution and Survival
The purpose of this study was to describe hormone receptor status
and analyze the effect of receptors on survival from breast cancer.
Comparisons were made between African-American and Caucasian racial
categories.
Breast cancer data from 1990 through 1997 collected
by the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and
End Results (SEER) Program were analyzed.
Subjects were 993 Caucasian
men, 12,303 African-American women, and 141,045 Caucasian women. The
number of African-American men was too small to analyze separately
(n = 93).
In addition to analysis of estrogen and progesterone
receptor status by sex and race, tumor and patient characteristics
included age, stage at time of diagnosis, and tumor histology.
The
proportion of Caucasian men with hormone receptor positive tumors
remained relatively high and stable for all ages. In women, the
proportion of hormone receptor positive tumors increased with age,
with African-American women having the highest proportion of hormone
receptor negative tumors.
Caucasian men had highest proportions of
hormone receptor positive tumors in all histology and stage groups,
while African-American women had lowest proportions of hormone receptor
positive tumors in all stage and histologic categories.
Survival for
African-American women was significantly worse for each hormone
receptor category. In multivariate analyses, race was a significant
independent predictor of survival, but sex was not.
Although reasons
for differences in hormone receptor status by sex and race are unknown,
several hypotheses are discussed with respect to differences in tumor
histopathology and risk factors.
[05/10/2002; Breast Cancer Research and Treatment]
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|