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Black women more likely than White women to die of most types of stage I endometrial cancer

Black women diagnosed with stage I endometrial cancer were more likely than White women to die of the cancer across all tumor types other than clear cell, despite receiving similar rates of treatment with chemotherapy or radiation. That was the finding of a study of over 24,000 women with surgically-staged endometrial cancer during 2000-2016. Survival […]

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Expanding access to lung cancer screenings still leaves some at-risk Black and Hispanic smokers ineligible

Black and Hispanic smokers are still less likely to be eligible for lung cancer screenings than white counterparts, despite a federal effort to expand the screenings to more individuals. The change did increase overall eligibility from 11 percent to 14 percent of adults, but existing disparities among racial and ethnic groups persisted, according to researcher

Expanding access to lung cancer screenings still leaves some at-risk Black and Hispanic smokers ineligible Read More »

Black and Asian women at high risk for breast cancer much less likely to get recommended MRI screenings

Breast MRIs find more cancer in high-risk women than mammography or ultrasound, so the American College of Radiology recommends that women at higher risk for breast cancer undergo annual breast MRIs. But a new study of 2,431 women at three breast imaging centers found that less than 20 percent of high-risk women got the MRIs,

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Black men with prostate cancer have better outcomes than White men in clinical trials of radiation therapy

Although Black men appeared to have more aggressive disease when they enrolled in clinical trials of radiation therapy for prostate cancer, their treatment outcomes and disease-specific outcomes were better than those of their white counterparts. That’s the “unexpected result” researchers found in a meta-analysis of seven randomized trials. “These results provide high-level evidence challenging the

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Minorities less likely to follow-up finding of nodules on chest scan for lung cancer

Non-Whites were less likely than Whites to follow-up the finding of potentially malignant nodules found on chest scans for lung cancer, according to a study of 1,843 patients diagnosed in 2016. “Unless a biopsy is performed (only feasible in a small proportion of nodules), the most effective way to discern benign versus malignant is to

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Men and women with colorectal cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than those from most affluent neighborhoods

Among older men and women with colorectal cancer, those living in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods were 33 percent more likely to die from their cancer during the years 2008 to 2017 than men and women living in the least disadvantaged neighborhoods. Those in the poorer neighborhoods were more likely to be Black. Cary Gross (above)

Men and women with colorectal cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than those from most affluent neighborhoods Read More »

Men and women with lung cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than those from most affluent neighborhoods

Among older men and women with lung cancer, those living in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods were 16 percent more likely to die from their cancer during the years 2008 to 2017 than men and women living in the least disadvantaged neighborhoods. Those in the poorer neighborhoods were more likely to be Black. Cary Gross (above)

Men and women with lung cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than those from most affluent neighborhoods Read More »

Men with prostate cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than men from most affluent neighborhoods

Among older men with prostate cancer, those living in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods were 38 percent more likely to die from their cancer during the years 2008 to 2017 than men living in the least disadvantaged neighborhoods. Men in the poorer neighborhoods were more likely to be Black. Cary Gross (above) of Yale University and

Men with prostate cancer from poorest neighborhoods much less likely to survive than men from most affluent neighborhoods Read More »

Black women may have a more inflamed breast cancer microenvironment

“I look at the tumor micro environment of black women with breast cancer,” says Yara Abdou, MD, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (above). “We have enough evidence to show that Black women with breast cancer have a different tumor biology, therefore they might have different biomarkers of response and a different

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Black women with Triple Negative Breast Cancer have less frequent genetic testing compared with White women

Black women diagnosed with Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) were more frequently unable to receive or declined genetic testing for BRCA mutations compared with White women, according to a survey of 577 patients aged 60 or younger in four hospital systems from 2015 through 2020. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network now recommends this testing for

Black women with Triple Negative Breast Cancer have less frequent genetic testing compared with White women Read More »

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