The purpose of this study is to compare the racial differences in treatment and overall survival (OS) of male breast cancer (MBC) patients. Data were extracted from the NCI SEER database that included population-based registries from 1988 to 2010 and analyzed using SPSS 20.0. 4,279 MBC patients were identified. 3,266 (76.3%) patients were White, 552 (12.9%) Black, 246 (5.7%) Hispanic, and 215 (5.0%) Asian. Black patients were more likely to be diagnosed at younger age (P<0.001), have advanced stage disease (P=0.001), and be unmarried (P<0.001) and less likely to undergo lymph node dissection (P=0.006). When stratified by stage, there was no difference in receipt of primary treatment by race. The 5-year OS for White, Black, Hispanic, and Asi...
The authors conducted a study to determine whether differences in prostate cancer survival betweenWh...
Background: Prostate cancer mortality is higher among black American men than among white American m...
Although racial disparity is well described for oncologic outcomes, factors associated with survival...
Copyright © 2014 Jacob Y. Shin et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative ...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
Background: No studies have attempted to determine whether nodal surgery utilization, time to initia...
Male breast cancer is rare but its incidence and mortality are increasing in the United States, with...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
BACKGROUND: Racial disparities in cancer outcomes have been observed in several malignancies. Howeve...
OBJECTIVE: We examined whether there were racial differences in initial treatment for clinically loc...
Objective: Real-world data characterizing differences between African American (AA) and White women ...
Data characterizing demographics, treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes in black patients with h...
Background: Male breast cancer is relatively rare (less than 1% of all cases of breast cancer) and u...
Breast cancer among males in the United States is rare; approximately 2,300 new cases and 500 associ...
The authors conducted a study to determine whether differences in prostate cancer survival betweenWh...
Background: Prostate cancer mortality is higher among black American men than among white American m...
Although racial disparity is well described for oncologic outcomes, factors associated with survival...
Copyright © 2014 Jacob Y. Shin et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative ...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
Background: No studies have attempted to determine whether nodal surgery utilization, time to initia...
Male breast cancer is rare but its incidence and mortality are increasing in the United States, with...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
BACKGROUND: Racial disparities in cancer outcomes have been observed in several malignancies. Howeve...
OBJECTIVE: We examined whether there were racial differences in initial treatment for clinically loc...
Objective: Real-world data characterizing differences between African American (AA) and White women ...
Data characterizing demographics, treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes in black patients with h...
Background: Male breast cancer is relatively rare (less than 1% of all cases of breast cancer) and u...
Breast cancer among males in the United States is rare; approximately 2,300 new cases and 500 associ...
The authors conducted a study to determine whether differences in prostate cancer survival betweenWh...
Background: Prostate cancer mortality is higher among black American men than among white American m...
Although racial disparity is well described for oncologic outcomes, factors associated with survival...