Disparity Matters

Spot Her is an initiative to help end silence around endometrial cancer

Spot Her Uterine cancer is the 4th most frequently diagnosed cancer for women in the U.S. In 2020, uterine cancer resulted in about 65,000 new cases and 12,500 deaths—and these rates are on the rise. Spot Her is an initiative to help end the silence around endometrial cancer. We aim to embrace the power of

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Black women in Georgia more likely than White women to be diagnosed with late-stage cervical cancer

“There are glaring racial disparities in cervical cancer deaths in the U.S.” “Although almost no one should die from cervical cancer, some groups—those that are historically marginalized and neglected in the US, including women of color, women living in poverty, and those without health insurance—die more often than others. There are glaring racial disparities in

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Lack of health insurance a big reason for higher breast cancer death rates in Black women

Oluchi Oke, M.D. “Lack of health insurance is a barrier” “Lack of health insurance is a barrier in receiving timely screening to detect breast cancer early on and is a big reason that we see higher breast cancer death rates in Black women,” says Oluchi Oke, MD, an oncologist at the University of Texas MD

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Hispanic women tend to be diagnosed at more advanced stages of breast cancer

“Hispanic women tend to be diagnosed with breast cancer with more advanced stages,” says Mariana Chavez Mac Gregor, MD, breast cancer physician at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. “We think this is due to a number of factors. Less access to healthcare, lower level of health literacy, a prolonged time between seeking

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Hispanic men vary in their survival from prostate cancer depending on country of origin

Among Hispanic Americans from different countries of origin, here are significant disparities in prostate cancer characteristics, treatment choice, and survival, based on a study of about 55,000 Hispanic American men diagnosed between 2004 and 2015. Mexicans had the least favorable prostate cancer characteristics at diagnosis, while Cubans had the worst overall survival and were most

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Black women with Triple Negative Breast Cancer given same new drug as White women do just as well

Treatment outcomes were similar between Black and non-Black patients with Triple-Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) who received the drug neoadjuvant durvalumab (Imfinzi) plus chemotherapy, according to new clinical trial results. Previous research demonstrated that the drug in combination with chemotherapy prior to surgery benefited patients with non-metastatic TNBC, but the study population did not reflect the

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When Men Say Their Dad Died from Bone Cancer, It Was Probably Prostate Cancer

When Men Say Their Dad Died from Bone Cancer… “So many men who come into my clinic and tell me their dad died of bone cancer; it is more likely prostate cancer that spread and they just didn’t know it,” says Kelvin Moses, MD, Director of the Comprehensive Prostate Cancer Clinic at Vanderbilt University. “I’ve

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