Abstract

This study aimed to explore trends in cervical cancer (CC) incidence and mortality rates according to race/skin color in Brazil focusing on the seriousness of the racial disparity. Data from Brazilian Population-Based Cancer Registries (PBCRs) were analyzed for trends in incidence between 2010 and 2015. For mortality, data from the National Mortality Information System were retrieved between 2000 and 2020. A self-declaration on race/skin color was collected following the classification proposed by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics - white, black, brown/mixed race, yellow, or indigenous. For the analysis, black and brown/mixed race were grouped as black. Between 2010 and 2015, 10,844 new cases of CC were registered in the participating PBCRs, distributed among white women (49.6%), black (48.0%), and other race/skin color (2.3%). Compared with white counterparts, black women had a 44% higher risk of incident CC. As for mortality, between 2000 and 2020, 108,590 deaths from CC occurred nationwide. The mean age-adjusted mortality rates according to race/skin color were 3.7/100,000 for white, 4.2/100,000 for black, 2.8 for yellow, and 6.7 for indigenous women. Taking the mortality rates in white women as a reference, there was a 27% increase in death risk in black women (RR = 1.27) and 82% in indigenous women (RR = 1.82). These findings suggest that the higher rates of incidence and mortality from CC in vulnerable populations of black and more impactfully indigenous women in Brazil remain alarming. More efficient HPV vaccination strategies synchronized with well-conducted Pap smear-based screening should be prioritized in these more vulnerable populations.

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