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Breast
Cancer Articles:
Breast cancer risk factors same for blacks,
whites
African-American women are known to
be more likely to die from
breast cancer than white women, yet new
study findings show that the factors associated with an increased risk
of death from the condition are similar in both groups.
"This study found that major known risk factors do not vary
considerably between these two groups, so this study underscores the
need for all women to follow breast cancer screening guidelines,"
study author Dr. Marjorie L. McCullough, of the Atlanta-based
American
Cancer Society, told Reuters Health.
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in
African-American and white women in the United States. But while
African-American women are less likely to develop
breast cancer than
white women, they are about 30 percent more likely to die from the
disease.
The reasons for these disparities are unknown, although researchers
have speculated that it may be partly due to African Americans' lack
of access to quality health care. Studies have also revealed that
African-American women begin menstruating at younger ages, have higher
levels of obesity and are less active than white women, factors that
may influence their risk of the disease.
Also, African-American women are known to have their cancer diagnosed
at later stages and to have more aggressive tumors than white women,
factors that other researchers have found to be associated with a
lower socioeconomic status.
Risk factors for breast cancer are assumed to be similar for both
white and African-American women, but most research has been conducted
only in whites.
McCullough and her colleagues therefore examined the anthropometric,
reproductive and lifestyle factors associated with the risk of death
from breast cancer among post-menopausal African-American women. They
analyzed data collected from 21,143 African-American and 409,093 white
women who were involved in the
American Cancer Society's Cancer
Prevention Study II, which began in 1982.
During a 20-year follow-up period,
257 African-American and 4,265 white women died from breast cancer.
Higher body mass index, taller height and physical inactivity
increased the risk of death from the disease for both
African-Americans and whites, McCullough and her colleagues report in
the American Journal of Epidemiology.
For every five-year age group examined, however, the rate of death from
breast cancer was higher in African-American women than in white
women.
African-American women with a college education were also about 60
percent more likely to die from
breast cancer than those without a
high school diploma, the report indicates. This association was not
observed among white women.
"There's no reason to think that college education in and of itself
would increase risk only in (African-American) women," McCullough
noted. "It is probably a marker of differences in reproductive
patterns in these women that is somehow not being picked up in the
same way among white women," she speculated.
Most of the other factors associated with an increased risk of
breast
cancer, including reproductive factors like non-childbearing, were
similarly associated with an increased risk of death in both groups,
McCullough and her team note.
In other findings, breast cancer death rates decreased over time among
the African-American women and the rates approached those observed
among their white counterparts by the end of the follow-up period. The
reason for this is unknown, according to the report, but it is
"promising," as it suggests that the disparity in breast cancer death
rates between the two groups may be diminishing.
McCullough told Reuters Health that "there are few known modifiable
risk factors for
breast cancer, so it is critical to do what is in our
control: exercise, maintain a healthy weight and closely follow
breast
cancer screening guidelines."
The
American Cancer Society recommends annual mammograms for women
ages 40 or older and clinical
breast self-exams - i.e. exams conducted
by a doctor, nurse or other health care expert — every three years,
during routine healthcare visits, for women in their 20s and 30s.
Source: Reuters, New
York Visit
"Advanced
Breast Care Specialists of Orange County" in
Mission Viejo, California.
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