Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Breast Cancer Treatment and Survival
Abstract
Previous studies have found that African-American women are more likely than white women to have late-stage breast cancer at diagnosis and shortened survival. However, there is considerable controversy as to whether these differences in diagnosis and survival are attributable to race or socioeconomic status. Our goal was to disentangle the influence of race and socioeconomic status on breast cancer stage, treatment, and survival.
We linked data from the Metropolitan Detroit Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER)(1) registry to Michigan Medicaid enrollment files and identified 5719 women diagnosed with breast cancer, of whom 593 were insured by Medicaid. We first calculated the unadjusted odds ratios (ORs) associated with race, Medicaid insurance, and poverty for breast cancer stage at diagnosis, breast cancer treatment, and death. We then estimated the ORs of having late-stage breast cancer at diagnosis, breast-conserving surgery, no surgery, and death using logistic regression after controlling for clinical and nonclinical factors. All statistical tests were two-sided.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.63
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Socioeconomic status
- Breast cancer
- Epidemiology
- Race (biology)
- Medicine
- Demography
- Population
- Cancer registry
- No poverty