news

Blacks more likely to diagnosed with late-stage lung cancer

Significantly more cases of early non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were caught following the introduction of low-dose CT lung cancer screening recommendations nearly a decade ago. But non-White patients did not share equally in the benefits. Researchers analyzed the medical records of more than 760,000 patients between 2010 and 2018. “In 2018, for the first […]

Blacks more likely to diagnosed with late-stage lung cancer Read More »

Breast cancer screening fell more in minority women during COVID-19 pandemic

Breast cancer screening dropped by more than 50 percent among women of color between 2019 and 2020, according to a study of more than 21,000 women and a variety of screening facilities. The percentage of women of color getting mammograms was 16.8% in 2019 vs 12.2% in 2020. During the COVID-19 peak, mammography screening volumes

Breast cancer screening fell more in minority women during COVID-19 pandemic Read More »

Black men treated for prostate cancer less likely to undergo valuable bone density testing

Black men on androgen deprivation therapy for prostate cancer were 20 percent less likely than White men to undergo bone density testing, which is significantly associated with a decreased risk for major osteoporotic fractures. Androgen deprivation therapy can affect bone health, resulting in decreased bone mineral density and fractures. In a group of nearly 55,000

Black men treated for prostate cancer less likely to undergo valuable bone density testing Read More »

Blacks half as likely as Whites to get lung cancer screening

Among current or former smokers, Blacks were 53 percent less likely than equally healthy Whites to undergo low-dose CT lung cancer screening, in a study of more than 14,000 U.S. patients aged 55 to 79. Unfortunately, this disparity occurs “despite the potential for greater benefit of screening this population,” said researcher Alison Rustagi of the

Blacks half as likely as Whites to get lung cancer screening Read More »

Blacks live longer than Whites with multiple myeloma if they get equal treatment

Black people with multiple myeloma live longer than white patients with similar disease symptoms when both receive the same new and updated medical treatments, according to an analysis of more than 24,000 patients treated between 1999 and 2017. However, Black myeloma patients were less likely to receive the latest treatments than White patients, even if they had

Blacks live longer than Whites with multiple myeloma if they get equal treatment Read More »

Racial Differences in Genomic Profiles May Help Explain Breast Cancer Outcomes

Genomic findings may help explain racial disparities in outcomes among patients with breast cancer, according to a study of 6652 patients with breast cancer who were treated from 2014 to 2020 and underwent extensive genetic testing. The study showed that Black patients with metastatic breast cancer were less likely than their White counterparts to have

Racial Differences in Genomic Profiles May Help Explain Breast Cancer Outcomes Read More »

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 »

Hispanic women diagnosed with cervical cancer one-third as likely to receive fertility-sparing treatment

Hispanic women diagnosed with cervical 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 IA or stage IB cervical cancer between 2004 and 2015 to see which women

Hispanic women diagnosed with cervical cancer one-third as 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 »

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 »

Scroll to Top