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Erschienen in: Cancer Causes & Control 6/2019

10.04.2019 | Original Paper

Disparities in breast cancer subtypes among women in the lower Mississippi Delta Region states

verfasst von: Whitney E. Zahnd, Recinda L. Sherman, Hillary Klonoff-Cohen, Sara L. McLafferty, Susan Farner, Karin A. Rosenblatt

Erschienen in: Cancer Causes & Control | Ausgabe 6/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

To describe and elucidate rates in breast cancer incidence by subtype in the federally designated Mississippi Delta Region, an impoverished region across eight Southern/Midwest states with a high proportion of Black residents and notable breast cancer mortality disparities.

Methods

Cancer registry data from seven LMDR states (Missouri was not included because of permission issues) were used to explore breast cancer incidence differences by subtype between the LMDR’s Delta and non-Delta Regions and between White and Black women within the Delta Region (2012–2014). Overall and subtype-specific age-adjusted incidence rates and rate ratios were calculated. Multilevel negative binomial regression models were used to evaluate how individual-level and area-level factors, like race/ethnicity and poverty level, respectively, affect rates of breast cancers by subtype.

Results

Women in the Delta Region had higher rates of triple-negative breast cancer, the most aggressive subtype, than women in the non-Delta (17.0 vs. 14.4 per 100,000), but the elevated rate was attenuated to non-statistical significance in multivariable analysis. Urban Delta women also had higher rates of triple-negative breast cancer than non-Delta urban women, which remained in multivariable analysis. In the Delta Region, Black women had higher overall breast cancer rates than their White counterparts, which remained in multivariable analysis.

Conclusion

Higher rates of triple-negative breast cancer in the Delta Region may help explain the Region’s mortality disparity. Further, an important area of future research is to determine what unaccounted for individual-level or social area-level factors contribute to the elevated breast cancer incidence rate among Black women in the Delta Region.
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Metadaten
Titel
Disparities in breast cancer subtypes among women in the lower Mississippi Delta Region states
verfasst von
Whitney E. Zahnd
Recinda L. Sherman
Hillary Klonoff-Cohen
Sara L. McLafferty
Susan Farner
Karin A. Rosenblatt
Publikationsdatum
10.04.2019
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Cancer Causes & Control / Ausgabe 6/2019
Print ISSN: 0957-5243
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7225
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-019-01168-0

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