Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, with at least five intrinsic subtypes defined by molecular characteristics. Tumors that express the estrogen receptor (ER+) have better outcomes than ER− tumors, due in part to the success of hormonal therapies that target ER+ tumors. The incidence of ER− breast cancer, and the subset of ER− cancers that are basal-like, is about twice as high among African American (AA) women as among U.S. women of European descent (EA). This disparity appears to explain, in part, the disproportionately high mortality from breast cancer that occurs in AA women. Epidemiologic research on breast cancer in AA women lags behind research in EA women. Here, we review differences in the etiology of breast cancer subtypes a...
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease presented by ...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
Over the last twenty-five years, researchers have identified several dozen genetic polymorphisms ass...
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, with at least five intrinsic subtypes defined by molecular...
Background: African American breast cancer patients have lower frequency of hormone receptor-positiv...
Background: Breast cancer subtype can be classified using standard clinical markers (estrogen recept...
We sought to investigate genetic variation in hormone pathways in relation to risk of overall and su...
It has been observed previously that compared with women of European ancestry (EA), those of African...
Breast cancer encompasses several distinct clinical entities of very different characteristics and b...
African American (AA) women are more likely than white women to be obese and to be diagnosed with ER...
Previous research identified differences in breast cancer-specific mortality across four "intrinsic"...
Gene expression analyses indicate that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with at least 5 immu...
Background: Breast cancer is currently regarded as a heterogeneous disease classified into various m...
Compared with white women, black women experience a disproportionate burden of aggressive breast can...
African American (AA) women have a higher mortality from breast cancer (BC) compared to European Ame...
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease presented by ...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
Over the last twenty-five years, researchers have identified several dozen genetic polymorphisms ass...
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, with at least five intrinsic subtypes defined by molecular...
Background: African American breast cancer patients have lower frequency of hormone receptor-positiv...
Background: Breast cancer subtype can be classified using standard clinical markers (estrogen recept...
We sought to investigate genetic variation in hormone pathways in relation to risk of overall and su...
It has been observed previously that compared with women of European ancestry (EA), those of African...
Breast cancer encompasses several distinct clinical entities of very different characteristics and b...
African American (AA) women are more likely than white women to be obese and to be diagnosed with ER...
Previous research identified differences in breast cancer-specific mortality across four "intrinsic"...
Gene expression analyses indicate that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with at least 5 immu...
Background: Breast cancer is currently regarded as a heterogeneous disease classified into various m...
Compared with white women, black women experience a disproportionate burden of aggressive breast can...
African American (AA) women have a higher mortality from breast cancer (BC) compared to European Ame...
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease presented by ...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
Over the last twenty-five years, researchers have identified several dozen genetic polymorphisms ass...