e18561 Background: Young women with breast cancer (BC) have unique issues, including fertility, genetic, and emotional health concerns; these may sometimes be inadequately addressed by providers. Given documented disparities in BC care and outcomes, we sought to explore whether provider attention to these issues differs by race, as well as to examine racial differences in satisfaction with care among young patients with BC. Methods: The Young & Strong Study was a cluster randomized trial of an educational and supportive care intervention at 14 academic + 40 community oncology practices across the US enrolling women with newly diagnosed BC at age ≤45 and their providers. Patients completed surveys at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months after enrollment. Race was self-reported at baseline. Provider attention to fertility, genetics, and emotional health was evaluated by medical record review. The proportions of patients with attention to these concerns by 3 months was compared by race (white, Black, Asian, multi-racial/other/unknown) using Fisher’s exact tests. Satisfaction with care was assessed with the Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire-18 (PSQ-18) at 3 months. Median scores for each of 7 PSQ-18 subscales (1-5 scale, higher scores=more satisfaction) were compared by race with the Kruskal-Wallis test. Results: 465/467 (99.6%) of enrolled patients had evaluable data. 77% were white, 12% Black, 4% Asian, and 7% multiracial/other/unk. Median age at diagnosis was 40 (range: 22-45) years. Provider attention to genetics (≥85%) and emotional health (≥90%) was high across groups, and there were no differences by race in attention to fertility, genetics, or emotional health (Table). Among 359/465 women (77%) who completed the PSQ-18, median subscale scores ranged from 3.5-4.5, indicating high levels of satisfaction with care. For the PSQ-18 technical quality domain, median scores were lower (p=.03), indicating less satisfaction, in Black and Asian women (4.0) and higher in white women (4.5). Median scores for other PSQ-18 domains (general satisfaction, interpersonal manner, communication, financial, time spent with doctor, accessibility) did not differ by race. Conclusions: Satisfaction with care was high and issues related to fertility, genetics and emotional health were addressed by providers in the majority of young women in our study, with minimal differences by race. These patients were all enrolled in a clinical trial and had access to high-quality care, limiting the generalizability of our findings. Larger, population-based studies in more diverse settings are warranted. Clinical trial information: NCT01647607. Attention to psychosocial concerns by race. [Table: see text]