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to Winter Spring News | WINTER/SPRING
2007
Younger African-American Women At Higher Risk
For Breast Cancer
Despite an overall decline in invasive breast cancer in the
United States in recent years, African-American women, particularly
younger ones, have not seen a significant decline in their
rates, according to researchers at the University of Pittsburgh.
These findings, which were presented at the American Public
Health Association (AHPA) Annual Meeting in Boston, strongly
suggest the need for additional research to understand why
these differences persist and to determine whether avoidable
or preventable factors account for these puzzling patterns.
Although white women have the highest overall breast cancer
incidence rates, African-American women under age 40 have a
significantly higher incidence of breast cancer, as well as
a higher rate of death from the disease. Furthermore, African-Americans
with breast cancer die at a younger age than women in other
groups.
To further investigate racial disparities in breast cancer
incidence, researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute’s (UPCI) Center for Environmental Oncology, collaborating
with researchers from Pitt’s Graduate School of Public Health
(GSPH), analyzed breast cancer incidence among African-American
and white women in the United States from 1975 to 2002. This
study found that the chances of getting breast cancer in newer
generations are about 21 percent higher in whites and 41 percent
higher in African-Americans than in previous generations of
women.
The researchers attributed much of the increased incidence
among white women to better detection, due to the widespread
availability of mammography screening beginning in 1994, and
to the use of hormone replacement therapy. However, because
mammography screening is not recommended as often for younger
African-American women, increased detection or changes in medical
practice cannot explain the patterns of breast cancer seen
in this ethnic group.
According to lead investigator Devra L. Davis, Ph.D., M.P.H.,
director of the UPCI Center for Environmental Oncology and
professor of epidemiology, GSPH, these findings suggest that
significant resources and research need to be directed toward
understanding why younger African-American women are at significantly
higher risk of developing breast cancer.
“The good news is that rates of invasive breast cancer are
on the decline overall. However, African-American women, particularly
younger women, have not shared in this trend. We need to find
out very quickly why this is and take immediate steps to rectify
the problem,”
she emphasized.
sources:
american public health association annual meeting, november
7, 2006, boston, ma. university of pittsburgh medical center
(http://www.upmc.edu)
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