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Why are African American women 1.5 to 2.2 times more likely than white women to die from breast cancer, despite their lower incidence of the disease? Is it solely because they have less access to medical care? Maybe not, according to a new analysis that will appear in an upcoming issue of the International Journal of Surgery. In a paper now available online, researchers propose that the excess mortality occurs partly because black women are more likely than white women to develop breast cancer before menopause, when surgery to remove the tumor may pose a higher risk of stimulating cancer growth.
The researchers, led by Michael Retsky, PhD in the Vascular Biology Program at Children's Hospital Boston, note that African American women are diagnosed with breast cancer at an average age of 46, versus 57 for white women, and that their excess mortality first appeared in the mid-1970s, just when mammography for early detection was introduced. Early breast cancer detection leads to earlier surgical removals, which may actually spur relapse in some premenopausal cancer patients, the researchers say.
"Looking at what's happening in African American women provides a research opportunity to learn how to better screen for and treat premenopausal breast cancer overall," says Retsky. "There's much to learn that might translate into improved outcomes for all premenopausal women."
The analysis extends an earlier analysis published in 2005, which suggested that undergoing surgery before menopause may actually encourage early metastasis and relapse. That paper analyzed data from 1,173 women in Italy who had breast cancer surgery, and found that, among those with lymph node-positive cancer, 20 percent of premenopausal women relapsed within 10 months after surgery -- double the relapse rate in women diagnosed after menopause. The researchers suggested that these early relapses help explain the "mammography paradox" -- the puzzling observation that mammography screening in women aged 40 to 49 has significantly less benefit than in women aged 50 to 59.
The 2005 paper sparked a flurry of correspondence that led to the new analysis. One letter noted a commonly held belief in the African American community that "exposing a cancer to air" will cause it to spread, an idea often dismissed as superstition. Another letter, from Nigerian physician Isaac Gukas, MD, PhD, observed that over 70 percent of the breast cancer patients he saw in Africa were under age 45, and that they had a poor survival rate, often rapidly deteriorating after surgery. According to Gukas, it is common in Africa for women to seek alternative care before eventually presenting to a physician with locally advanced disease, for fear that treatment will "provoke" the cancer.
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