Cancer 1991 Jun 1;67(11):2850-4
A comparison of treatment outcomes for black patients and white patients
with metastatic breast cancer. The Piedmont Oncology Association experience.
Kimmick G, Muss HB, Case LD, Stanley V.
Comprehensive Cancer Center, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North
Carolina.
Prior studies have shown that black patients with breast cancer have
poorer survival times compared with white patients even when adjusted
for stage. Seventy-four black patients treated on six Piedmont Oncology
Association (POA) protocols were compared with 74 randomly selected white
patients treated with the same protocols to determine if race had any
independent effect on response, time to progression, or survival time.
Patients were evenly matched for pretreatment characteristics with the
exception that white patients had a significantly higher percentage of
bone metastases and significantly less skin involvement. Response rates
and median time to progression were similar for black patients and white
patients at 31% and 25%, and 9.3 and 9.1 months, respectively. Black patients
had poorer survival times even when adjusting for covariables; median
survival time was 14.3 months for black patients and 20.3 months for white
patients (P less than 0.05). The reason for this survival difference in
Stage IV patients is unclear, but is unlikely to be related to treatment.
Additional research in this area will be necessary to resolve this issue.
PMID: 2025850 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]