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Differences in Breast Cancer Presentation at Time of Diagnosis for Black and White Women in High Resource Settings

Jo-Ann Osei-Twum, Sahra Gedleh, Aïsha Lofters, Onye Nnorom

2021Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper provides a narrative review of the existing literature on differences in demographic and biological features of breast cancer at time of diagnosis between Black and White women in Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. Electronic database searches for published peer-reviewed articles on this topic were conducted, and 78 articles were included in the final narrative review. Differences between Black and White women were compared for eight categories including age, tumour stage, size, grade, lymph node involvement, and hormone status. Black women were significantly more likely to present with less favourable tumour features at the time of diagnosis than White women. Significant differences were reported in age at diagnosis, tumour stage, size, grade and hormone status, particularly triple negative breast cancer. Limitations on the generalizability of the review findings are discussed, as well as the implications of these findings on future research, especially within the Canadian context.

Topics & Concepts

Breast cancerGeneralizability theoryMedicineContext (archaeology)Public healthStage (stratigraphy)White (mutation)Narrative reviewNarrativeCancerDemographyFamily medicineGynecologyGerontologyPsychologyInternal medicinePathologyIntensive care medicineGeographyDevelopmental psychologyGeneChemistryArchaeologySociologyLinguisticsPaleontologyPhilosophyBiochemistryBiologyBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningBreast Lesions and Carcinomas
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