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Clinical Characteristics of Breast Cancers in African‐American Women with Benign Breast Disease: A Comparison to the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program
Author(s) -
Mitro Susanna D.,
AliFehmi Rouba,
Bandyopadhyay Sudeshna,
Alosh Baraa,
Albashiti Bassam,
Radisky Derek C.,
Frost Marlene H.,
Degnim Amy C.,
Ruterbusch Julie J.,
Cote Michele L.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the breast journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.533
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1524-4741
pISSN - 1075-122X
DOI - 10.1111/tbj.12331
Subject(s) - medicine , breast cancer , population , epidemiology , breast disease , oncology , gynecology , surveillance, epidemiology, and end results , cancer , cancer registry , environmental health
Benign breast disease ( BBD ) is a very common condition, diagnosed in approximately half of all A merican women throughout their lifecourse. White women with BBD are known to be at substantially increased risk of subsequent breast cancer; however, nothing is known about breast cancer characteristics that develop after a BBD diagnosis in A frican‐ A merican women. Here, we compared 109 breast cancers that developed in a population of A frican‐ A merican women with a history of BBD to 10,601 breast cancers that developed in a general population of A frican‐ A merican women whose cancers were recorded by the M etropolitan D etroit C ancer S urveillance S ystem ( MDCSS population). Demographic and clinical characteristics of the BBD population were compared to the MDCSS population, using chi‐squared tests, F isher's exact tests, t ‐tests, and W ilcoxon tests where appropriate. K aplan– M eier curves and Cox regression models were used to examine survival. Women in the BBD population were diagnosed with lower grade (p = 0.02), earlier stage cancers (p = 0.003) that were more likely to be hormone receptor‐positive (p = 0.03) compared to the general metropolitan Detroit A frican‐ A merican population. In situ cancers were more common among women in the BBD cohort (36.7%) compared to the MDCSS population (22.1%, p < 0.001). Overall, women in the BBD population were less likely to die from breast cancer after 10 years of follow‐up (p = 0.05), but this association was not seen when analyses were limited to invasive breast cancers. These results suggest that breast cancers occurring after a BBD diagnosis may have more favorable clinical parameters, but the majority of cancers are still invasive, with survival rates similar to the general A frican‐ A merican population.

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