Disparity Matters

Black and Hispanic women diagnosed with breast cancer less likely to receive fertility-sparing treatment

Black and Hispanic women diagnosed with breast cancer were only one-third as likely as White women to receive treatment that helped preserve their fertility in a study of women in California. Researchers analyzed medical records of more than 44,000 women diagnosed with stage I to stage III breast cancer between 2004 and 2015 to see […]

Black and Hispanic women diagnosed with breast cancer less likely to receive fertility-sparing treatment Read More »

Racial disparities in breast cancer screening persisted through pandemic

After plummeting during the first COVID-19 wave in April 2020, the breast cancer screening rate for White women recovered by June 2020, with the rate for Black women on a slightly slower pace, according to a review of 14 million medical records. Asian, Hispanic, and American Indian/Alaskan Native women did not experience a rebound in

Racial disparities in breast cancer screening persisted through pandemic Read More »

Diagnosis of endometrial cancer in Black women increasing more than three times faster than in White women

The incidence of high-risk uterine cancer is increasing in the United States, particularly among Black patients, according to a new study of nearly 800,000 women diagnosed with uterine cancer between 2001 and 2017. During that time, the incidence of uterine cancer increased regardless of race, but the rate was 3.6 times higher in Black patients

Diagnosis of endometrial cancer in Black women increasing more than three times faster than in White women Read More »

Race-related stress linked to delays in treatment of gynecologic cancers

Black patients undergoing treatment for gynecologic cancers report higher race-related stress as compared to White patients. The experience of racism was associated with increased treatment interruptions, increased length of treatment interruptions, and increased time to treatment initiation, in a survey of 70 Black and White women. “The experience of racism is associated with negative impacts

Race-related stress linked to delays in treatment of gynecologic cancers Read More »

Black and Hispanic women underrepresented in clinical trials of treatment for endometrial cancer

Black and Hispanic patients were often underrepresented in individual clinical trials cited in the standard recommendations for systemic therapy for endometrial cancer, according to a survey of clinical studies. Black patients made up 7.4% of the clinical trials, but the percentage of Black patients with endometrial cancer was 10% of total patients in the U.S.

Black and Hispanic women underrepresented in clinical trials of treatment for endometrial cancer Read More »

Increased Activity of Two Molecular Networks Could Explain Racial Disparity in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Deaths

Different activity in two molecular networks could help explain why triple negative breast cancers tend to be more aggressive in African American women compared with white American women, a new study from Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center suggests. Dipali Sharma, PhD (above), and her colleagues compared the behavior of triple negative breast cancer cell lines

Increased Activity of Two Molecular Networks Could Explain Racial Disparity in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Deaths Read More »

Jump in Metastatic Prostate Cancer after end of routine PSA screening

The incidence of metastatic prostate cancer, cancer that spread from the prostate, shot up in the United States after after an official recommendation not to routinely screen men with the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test, according to a new study. The thinking was that the harms of screening all men — leading to unnecessary prostatectomies and

Jump in Metastatic Prostate Cancer after end of routine PSA screening Read More »

Redlined neighborhoods see more air pollution that can cause lung cancer

Neighborhoods that were subject to redlining in the 1930s tend to have higher levels of air pollution many decades later, a new study has found. Redlining was the discriminatory mortgage appraisal practice used by the federal government after the Great Depression, drawing lines around Black and immigrant areas that denoted them as risky sites for

Redlined neighborhoods see more air pollution that can cause lung cancer Read More »

Older Black men much less likely than White men to get prostate MRI

Older Black men were much less likely than White men to receive a prostate MRI during the years 2011 to 2015.  The disparity was linked to major drivers of health care inequalities, such as living in an affluent vs poor or more racially segregated neighborhood. As a diagnostic tool, prostate MRIs improve the identification of

Older Black men much less likely than White men to get prostate MRI Read More »

Black patients wait longer for diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer

Black patients wait longer for their diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer than White patients, according to a new study of US Black and white patients diagnosed between January 2019 and August 2020. Among patients who sought chemo or surgery, Black patients waited an average of eight days longer (67 days post-diagnosis) than White patients

Black patients wait longer for diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer Read More »

Scroll to Top