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Black and
Hispanic Women with Breast Cancer face
Treatment delays
By Glenda Fauntleroy, Contributing Writer
Health
Behavior News Service
Research Source: Journal of Health Care for
the Poor and Underserved
At a time when access to prompt treatment might affect
survival, a large new study finds that
African-American and Hispanic women newly
diagnosed with breast cancer often face
delays in care of more than a month.
In the study appearing in the February issue
of the Journal
of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved,
researchers evaluated data from the National
Cancer Database to examine the link between
race and treatment delay among more than
250,000 women who were diagnosed with stage
I to stage III breast cancer between 2003
and 2006.
Researchers found that 62.4 percent of African-American
women and 59.3 percent of Hispanic women
received a diagnosis of stage II or stage
III breast cancer compared with 48.9 percent
of white women, and past research has linked
diagnosis at advanced stages to lower
survival rates.
Delays in treatment were apparent in the new study, as
African-American and Hispanic women had
higher risks of 30-, 60- and 90-day delays
compared to white women.
“I was surprised at how strong the
associations between race and ethnicity and
the risk of 60- and 90-day delays were,”
said lead author Stacey Fedewa, an
epidemiologist at the American Cancer
Society in Atlanta.
For example, the risk of a 60-day treatment
delay was 76 percent higher among
African-American patients with private
insurance than that of white patients with
comparable insurance.
Hispanics with private insurance had a 57 percent higher
risk of a 60-day delay compared with whites.
Peter Ravdin, M.D., director of the Breast
Health Clinic at the University of Texas
Health Science Center San Antonio, said that
although the “diagnosis of breast cancer is
not an absolute day-by-day emergency,”
clinicians try to see that patients start
therapy as quickly as possible.
“Certainly sometimes, unfortunately, access
to the health care system is an issue,”
Ravdin said.
“However, most women want to get a positive course of
action started as soon as it is safe, and
most health care teams try to see that such
therapy starts as soon as all the
information needed for treatment planning is
available.”
The study’s more encouraging findings were
that a majority — 60 percent — of the
patients did receive prompt treatment after
diagnosis — with an average time to
treatment of 34 days.
“It’s a positive sign that breast cancer
patients are being treated in a timely
manner,” said Fedewa.
“However, more work needs to be done to determine and
alleviate the patient and structural
barriers preventing select subsets of breast
cancer patients, particularly Hispanic and
black patients, from receiving timely
treatment.”