Introduction: Breast cancer is currently viewed as a heterogeneous disease made up of various subtypes, with distinct differences in prognosis. Our goal was to study the distribution and to characterize the clinical and biological factors that influence the behavior and clinical management of the different molecular breast cancer subtypes in premenopausal African-American women. Methods: A retrospective analysis of Howard University Hospital tumor registry, for all premenopausal African-American women aged less than 50 years, diagnosed with breast cancer from 1998-2005, was performed. Results: The luminal A subtype was the most prevalent (50.0%), vs basal-cell-like (23.2%), luminal B (14.1%), and HER-2/neu (12.7%). However when stratified b...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
poster abstractAfrican American women who are diagnosed with breast cancer have a 41% higher mortali...
Background: Higher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American thannon-HispanicWhitewomen are...
Background: Breast cancer is currently regarded as a heterogeneous disease classified into various m...
Objective: To analyze whether the local-regional surgical treatments (breast-conserving therapy, mas...
Background: Breast cancer subtype can be classified using standard clinical markers (estrogen recept...
Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic significance of the basal cell-like...
Introduction: Breast cancer is divided into various molecular subtypes including luminal, HER2 and b...
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, with at least five intrinsic subtypes defined by molecular...
Previous research identified differences in breast cancer-specific mortality across four "intrinsic"...
Abstract Introduction Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with varying clinical outcomes in his...
Background: African American breast cancer patients have lower frequency of hormone receptor-positiv...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
Risk factors for the newly identified “intrinsic” breast cancer subtypes (luminal A, luminal B, basa...
Background: Secular trends in incidence and prognosis of molecular breast cancer subtypes are poorly...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
poster abstractAfrican American women who are diagnosed with breast cancer have a 41% higher mortali...
Background: Higher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American thannon-HispanicWhitewomen are...
Background: Breast cancer is currently regarded as a heterogeneous disease classified into various m...
Objective: To analyze whether the local-regional surgical treatments (breast-conserving therapy, mas...
Background: Breast cancer subtype can be classified using standard clinical markers (estrogen recept...
Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic significance of the basal cell-like...
Introduction: Breast cancer is divided into various molecular subtypes including luminal, HER2 and b...
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, with at least five intrinsic subtypes defined by molecular...
Previous research identified differences in breast cancer-specific mortality across four "intrinsic"...
Abstract Introduction Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with varying clinical outcomes in his...
Background: African American breast cancer patients have lower frequency of hormone receptor-positiv...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
Risk factors for the newly identified “intrinsic” breast cancer subtypes (luminal A, luminal B, basa...
Background: Secular trends in incidence and prognosis of molecular breast cancer subtypes are poorly...
BackgroundHigher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American than non-Hispanic White women ar...
poster abstractAfrican American women who are diagnosed with breast cancer have a 41% higher mortali...
Background: Higher breast cancer mortality rates for African-American thannon-HispanicWhitewomen are...