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Black men less likely than White men to die from prostate cancer when social determinants of health are accounted for

Black men had a 29 percent increased risk of dying from prostate cancer, compared with White men, in studies that had only a low accounting for social determinants of health. Conversely, in studies with a high accounting for these factors, Black men had a 14 percent lower risk of dying from prostate cancer compared with […]

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Women who developed endometrial cancer after World Trade Center attack now eligible for medical coverage and financial compensation

Women who were exposed to Ground Zero after the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center and consequently developed uterine cancer, including endometrial cancer, are now eligible for medical coverage and financial compensation from the WTC Health Program. This is a limited federal health program that provides no-cost medical monitoring and treatment for certified WTC-related

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Most primary care providers admit in survey to having only a moderate ability to recognize inflammatory breast cancer in patients

In a survey of 78 primary care providers conducted by Gayathri R. Devi, Ph.D.,(above) and her colleagues at Duke University, most physicians expressed only a moderate ability to recognize inflammatory breast cancer in their patients. Less than a third had ever suspected IBC in a patient. Nearly half thought (wrongly) that a palpable breast mass

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Black women more likely to die sooner than other women from type II endometrial cancer

In a study of nearly 15,000 cases of type II endometrial cancer between 2007 and 2016, the 5-year cancer-related death rate was 41% for Black women, compared with 32% for White and Hispanic women and 30% for Asian and Pacfic Islander women. The higher death rate was linked primarily to the women’s disease stage, tumor

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Black men with prostate cancer less likely to receive shorter radiation regimen linked to higher rates of treatment completion

Black men with prostate cancer were less likely than White men to receive stereotactic body radiotherapy or moderately hypofractionated external-beam radiotherapy, despite evidence showing that shorter radiotherapy regimens are associated with higher rates of treatment completion. In this study of 170,386 U.S. men with localized prostate cancer who underwent radiation therapy without radical prostatectomy, Black

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Gene mutations found that may increase risk of prostate cancer for some Black men

In a study of 743 Black men diagnosed with prostate cancer at or before age 62, four percent of the men had mutations in one or more of 14 genes that could have contributed to the development of their cancer. Those with these mutations were more likely to have higher PSA levels, more advanced prostate

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Black and Hispanic women missing from endometrial cancer clinical trials

Black women comprised only 7% and Hispanic women only 6% of the endometrial cancer clinical trials conducted between 1988 and 2019 that specified the race and ethnicity of participants. During that time period, less than 10% of the trials reported race and 5% reported ethnicity of the women. “The first step in addressing cancer care

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Low lung cancer screening rates in the U.S. are ‘simply unacceptable’

Less than 6 percent of eligible Americans have undergone lung cancer screening, according to the American Lung Association, a situation that is “simply unacceptable,” says Hossein Borghaei, D.O., chief of the division of thoracic medical oncology at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. An estimated 14.2 million Americans meet the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force

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Lower prostate cancer screening rates linked to subsequent increase in advanced prostate cancer in VA system

PSA screening rates for prostate cancer declined from 2005 to 2019 for millions of men in 128 facilities of the Veterans Administration health system, while at the same time diagnoses of advanced prostate cancer increased by 72 percent. The greater the decrease in yearly screening in facilities, the greater the subsequent rate of metastatic prostate

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