与非裔美国人身份相关的乳腺癌差异。

Q1 Medicine
Erica M Stringer-Reasor, Ahmed Elkhanany, Katia Khoury, Melissa A Simon, Lisa A Newman
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引用次数: 24

摘要

几十年来,非裔美国人和白人在乳腺癌负担上的持续差异已经被记录下来。非裔美国人社区乳腺癌的特征包括死亡率高出40%,年龄分布更年轻,晚期分布更大,生物侵袭性疾病(如三阴性表型)的风险增加,男性乳腺癌的发病率增加。公共卫生专家、遗传学研究人员、临床试验人员、多学科肿瘤学团队和倡导者必须合作,全面解决乳腺癌差异的多因素病因和补救措施。在2019冠状病毒病大流行及其对非洲裔美国人造成的不成比例的巨大经济损失的背景下,通过改善获得负担得起的高质量护理的机会,努力实现乳房健康公平尤为重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disparities in Breast Cancer Associated With African American Identity.

Persistent disparities in the burden of breast cancer between African Americans and White Americans have been documented over many decades. Features characterizing breast cancer in the African American community include a 40% higher mortality rate, younger age distribution, greater advanced-stage distribution, increased risk of biologically aggressive disease such as the triple-negative phenotype, and increased incidence of male breast cancer. Public health experts, genetics researchers, clinical trialists, multidisciplinary oncology teams, and advocates must collaborate to comprehensively address the multifactorial etiology of and remedies for breast cancer disparities. Efforts to achieve breast health equity through improved access to affordable, high-quality care are especially imperative in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and its disproportionately high economic toll on African Americans.

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期刊介绍: The Ed Book is a National Library of Medicine–indexed collection of articles written by ASCO Annual Meeting faculty and invited leaders in oncology. Ed Book was launched in 1985 to highlight standards of care and inspire future therapeutic possibilities in oncology. Published annually, each volume highlights the most compelling research and developments across the multidisciplinary fields of oncology and serves as an enduring scholarly resource for all members of the cancer care team long after the Meeting concludes. These articles address issues in the following areas, among others: Immuno-oncology, Surgical, radiation, and medical oncology, Clinical informatics and quality of care, Global health, Survivorship.
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