z-logo
Premium
Long‐term outcomes and clinicopathologic differences of African‐American versus white patients treated with breast conservation therapy for early‐stage breast cancer
Author(s) -
Moran Meena S.,
Yang Qifeng,
Harris Lyndsay N.,
Jones Beth,
Tuck David P.,
Haffty Bruce G.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.23881
Subject(s) - medicine , breast cancer , stage (stratigraphy) , oncology , radiation therapy , confidence interval , lymph node , chemotherapy , cohort , multivariate analysis , cancer , metastasis , gastroenterology , paleontology , biology
BACKGROUND. African–American (AA) and white patients with early–stage disease who were treated with breast conservation therapy (BCT) were examined to detect differences in clinicopathologic features and outcomes as a function of race. METHODS. Clinical data from the charts of 2164 white and 207 AA patients treated with BCT, and p53 expression status on 444 patients (from an existing tissue database), were analyzed to detect differences between the 2 cohorts. RESULTS. The median follow‐up was 7 years. There were no differences in the method of tumor detection, lymph nodes excised, surgical margin status, or chemotherapy/radiotherapy delivered, reflecting similar screening and treatment policies for AA women in the study community. Despite this, AA patient presented at a younger age, with higher T and N classifications, and more estrogen and progesterone negative and “triple negative” tumors (all P values <.016). Tumors in AA patients were p53 positive more often than tumors in white patients ( P = .0003). At 10 years, AA patients had a higher rate of distant metastasis (20% vs 17%; P = .042), lymph node recurrence (6% vs 2%; P = .004), and breast recurrence (17% vs 13%; P = .036). There was no difference in overall survival between the 2 groups. On multivariate analysis, only lymph node recurrence (risk ratio of 3.140; 95% confidence interval, 1.396‐7.063 [ P = .0057]) remained significantly higher among AA women. CONCLUSIONS. In this cohort of uniformly treated patients, the authors found the expected clinicopathologic differences, but race was not found to be an independent predictor of local recurrence for AA patients when other confounding variables were taken into account in the multivariate model. These findings suggest that BCT is a reasonable option for appropriately selected AA patients. To the authors' knowledge, this is the largest study addressing outcomes after BCT for AA women published to date. Cancer 2008. © 2008 American Cancer Society.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here