Abstract

Follow-up studies on 466 patients over a 5-year period showed Whites to have an overall significantly longer disease-free interval and survival than Blacks and Asians. No racial differences in prognosis were seen in patients with Stage II disease (p greater than 0.2) but in Stage III, White patients had significantly longer disease-free periods than Blacks or Asians; the same was not true of survival. Whites had a 67% incidence of cytoplasmic estrogen receptor (CER) positive tumors compared with only 49% in Blacks and 41% in Asians. When tumors were assayed for CER, nuclear estrogen receptor (NER), and cytoplasmic progesterone receptor (CPR), there were no racial differences in the proportions of tumors containing all 3 receptors, but significant variations were found in neoplasms with no receptors and in those with apparently defective receptors. In White patients receptor status had no influence on prognosis (p greater than 0.3). Black patients whose tumors contained both CER and NER had a significantly better time to recurrence than those whose tumors lacked these receptors, while in Asian women the presence of CER alone, or CER together with NER, or CER, NER, and CPR, was indicative of a significantly longer disease-free period.

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