Abstract

e18526 Background: Breast cancer is the most common female malignancy. While there have been significant advances in diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer, there are gaps in care leading to high mortality rates in low socio-economic populations and ethnic minorities. This inequality is attributed to poor access to care and later stages at diagnosis. Methods: All female breast cancer patients between 2000-2020 (N=8,444) were included. Statistical analysis was done with X2 testing for categorical variables and T-tests for continuous variables. A univariate logistic regression was used to understand impact of each characteristic. Results: Black women were more likely to have poor prognostic factors for breast cancer compared to white women: distant metastatic disease at diagnosis (4.6% vs 3.2%, p=0.02), triple negative disease (25% vs 13.6%, p<0.01), high oncotype dx score >25 (37.2% vs 26.1%, p=0.04), recurrence (14.9% vs 12.1%, p=0.04), and mortality rate (24.2% vs 15.6%, p<0.01). Despite these high-risk factors, white women were more likely to have a mastectomy than black women (43.8% vs 35.4%, p<0.01), and the average age at diagnosis was higher in black women at 59.2±13.5 years compared to white women at 57.5±12.8 years (p<0.01). The most prominent poor prognostic factor in black women was having triple negative breast cancer with OR 2.13 (95% CI 1.7- 2.6) compared to others in Table. Hispanic women were more likely to have higher stage at diagnosis (OR 1.21), lymph node involvement (OR 1.03), metastatic disease (OR 1.43), and tumor size >1cm (OR 1.06) than nonHispanic women, but only lymph node involvement at diagnosis was statistically significant (29.1% vs 24.5%, p=0.02). Conclusions: There is a high prevalence of racial and ethnic disparities in women with breast cancer. Black women are more likely to have poor prognostic factors including metastatic disease at diagnosis and triple negative breast cancer, leading to higher recurrence and mortality rates. Hispanic women are also more likely to have poor prognostic factors, but this data was not statistically significant due to small sample size. Efforts to improve access to health care leading to earlier diagnosis may decrease the gap in mortality rate for minority women with predisposition to high-risk malignancies.[Table: see text]

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call