Breast
Cancer Res Treat 1998 Jul;50(1):1-9
Differences in breast cancer stage at diagnosis between non-Hispanic
white and Hispanic populations, San Diego County 1988-1993.
Bentley JR, Delfino RJ, Taylor TH, Howe S, Anton-Culver H.
University of California, San Diego, Department of Family and Preventive
Medicine, USA.
The incidence of breast cancer in the U.S. is lower among Hispanic women
than non-Hispanic white women. However, population-based studies show
that Hispanic women are more likely to be diagnosed at a later stage than
non-Hispanic whites. We aimed to determine whether: 1) a lower proportion
of breast cancer was diagnosed at early vs. late stages in Hispanic compared
to non-Hispanic white women from 1988-93 in San Diego County, and 2) lower
income is related to later stage at diagnosis for both groups. All incident
cases of breast cancer in San Diego County from the California Cancer
Registry (10,161 cases) were stratified by 'early' (in situ or localized)
or 'late' (regional or distant) stage, and by race/ethnicity. Annual average
age-adjusted incidence rates/100,000 (AAIR) were calculated. Incidence
rate ratios (IRR) (AAIR for early stages divided by AAIR for late stages)
were used as a surrogate of early detection. AAIRs for early and late
stage disease were significantly higher for non-Hispanic whites (89.3,
42.3) than Hispanic women (46.7, 27.2). The IRR was significantly higher
for non-Hispanic whites than Hispanics, (2.11 vs 1.72, p = 0.01). This
difference was greatest among women under 50 years old (IRR difference
0.63), and not apparent for women 65 or older (IRR difference 0.06). There
was also an association between increasing census tract per capita income
and higher rates of early stage disease among non-Hispanic whites but
not Hispanics. Results suggest that Hispanic women and lower income women
should be targeted for early detection.
PMID: 9802615 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]