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Black women are more likely to be diagnosed with later stage breast cancer and have higher mortality rates from breast cancer than white women. To determine whether cancer treatment varies for white and black women, we analyzed data from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Black-White Cancer Survival Study (BWCSS). Data from hospital medical records, central review of histology slides, and patient interviews on 861 breast cancer cases (in situ and invasive) were examined. Minimum expected therapy was defined for each disease stage as a basic minimum course of treatment that incorporated current practice, state-of-the-art knowledge, and recommendations advanced by NIH Consensus Conferences up to and including the one held in 1985. Patients in this study were diagnosed during 1985-1986. Using logistic regression techniques, those who received at least the minimum expected therapy were compared to those who did not. Thirty-six percent of the patients with late stage disease did not receive minimum expected therapy compared to four percent of the patients with early stage disease. Older women and women with no usual source of care were significantly less likely to receive minimum expected therapy. Overall, 21

作者:N, Breen;M N, Wesley;R M, Merrill;K, Johnson

来源:Ethnicity & disease 1999 年 9卷 1期

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作者:
N, Breen;M N, Wesley;R M, Merrill;K, Johnson
来源:
Ethnicity & disease 1999 年 9卷 1期
Black women are more likely to be diagnosed with later stage breast cancer and have higher mortality rates from breast cancer than white women. To determine whether cancer treatment varies for white and black women, we analyzed data from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Black-White Cancer Survival Study (BWCSS). Data from hospital medical records, central review of histology slides, and patient interviews on 861 breast cancer cases (in situ and invasive) were examined. Minimum expected therapy was defined for each disease stage as a basic minimum course of treatment that incorporated current practice, state-of-the-art knowledge, and recommendations advanced by NIH Consensus Conferences up to and including the one held in 1985. Patients in this study were diagnosed during 1985-1986. Using logistic regression techniques, those who received at least the minimum expected therapy were compared to those who did not. Thirty-six percent of the patients with late stage disease did not receive minimum expected therapy compared to four percent of the patients with early stage disease. Older women and women with no usual source of care were significantly less likely to receive minimum expected therapy. Overall, 21