Black men are more likely to die from lung cancer than persons of any other racial or ethnic group. A new study suggests that better detection could reduce that disparity
Although race, in and of itself, is not a relevant biologic variable, racial differences in disease ...
Background: The inverse relationship between BMI and lung cancer diagnosis is well defined. However,...
Importance: Non-Hispanic Black individuals experience a higher burden of COVID-19 than the general ...
Abstract Because existing risk prediction models for lung cancer were developed in white popula-tion...
Incidence and mortality rates of cancer in blacks have been increasing at a faster rate than in whit...
Lung cancer remains the most common cause of cancer mortality in both Rhode Island and the United St...
Lung cancer is the second most common type of cancer that afflicts men and women. Prostate and brea...
Black patients have higher lung cancer risk despite lower pack years of smoking. We assessed lung ca...
IntroductionFew lung cancer studies have focused on lung cancer survival in underserved populations....
The content of this article has been reviewed by independent peer reviewers to ensure that it is bal...
Background: It remains unknown how race-based differences in cancer outcomes have changed with time....
BACKGROUND: Comparisons of incidence and mortality rates are the metrics used most commonly to defin...
African Americans have higher cancer mortality rates than whites. Understanding the relative contrib...
African American (AA) males have a higher incidence and mortality rate for some cancers than other r...
small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), African-Americans have lower survival rates than non-African-Amer...
Although race, in and of itself, is not a relevant biologic variable, racial differences in disease ...
Background: The inverse relationship between BMI and lung cancer diagnosis is well defined. However,...
Importance: Non-Hispanic Black individuals experience a higher burden of COVID-19 than the general ...
Abstract Because existing risk prediction models for lung cancer were developed in white popula-tion...
Incidence and mortality rates of cancer in blacks have been increasing at a faster rate than in whit...
Lung cancer remains the most common cause of cancer mortality in both Rhode Island and the United St...
Lung cancer is the second most common type of cancer that afflicts men and women. Prostate and brea...
Black patients have higher lung cancer risk despite lower pack years of smoking. We assessed lung ca...
IntroductionFew lung cancer studies have focused on lung cancer survival in underserved populations....
The content of this article has been reviewed by independent peer reviewers to ensure that it is bal...
Background: It remains unknown how race-based differences in cancer outcomes have changed with time....
BACKGROUND: Comparisons of incidence and mortality rates are the metrics used most commonly to defin...
African Americans have higher cancer mortality rates than whites. Understanding the relative contrib...
African American (AA) males have a higher incidence and mortality rate for some cancers than other r...
small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), African-Americans have lower survival rates than non-African-Amer...
Although race, in and of itself, is not a relevant biologic variable, racial differences in disease ...
Background: The inverse relationship between BMI and lung cancer diagnosis is well defined. However,...
Importance: Non-Hispanic Black individuals experience a higher burden of COVID-19 than the general ...