Sept. 30, 2004 — Elderly African-American men are less likely to get tested
for prostate cancer than elderly white men, according to an article in the Sept.
27 issue of The Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American
Medical Association.
According to the article, major racial differences
exist in prostate cancer incidence and death rates in the United States.
African-American men are 60 percent more likely to be diagnosed with prostate
cancer than white men and twice as likely to die from it, the article states.
Low screening rates among African American men may contribute to these
disparities, but few data exists on racial differences in prostate cancer
screening.
Timothy Gilligan, M.D., of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in
Boston and colleagues studied differences in prostate cancer screening rates
using the prostate-specific antigen test (PSA test, a blood test) among African
Americans and white men aged 65 years and older who participated in the Medicare
and/or Medicaid program in New Jersey.
The researchers looked at the
medical records of 33,463 men who underwent routine prostate cancer screening
between Jan. 1, 1994 and Dec. 31, 1996. These men were matched to 33,782 control
patients of the same age who did not undergo prostate cancer screening. Among
the patients studied, 5.7 percent were black and 87.6 percent were
white.
The researchers found that black men were only half as likely to
be tested for prostate cancer as white men. Men classified as living in poverty
or near poverty were 67 percent and 31 percent less likely to undergo prostate
cancer screening, respectively.
“Elderly blacks are substantially less
likely to undergo PSA screening than elderly whites,” the authors write.
“Differences in socioeconomic status and comorbid conditions explain only a
small part of the racial differences in screening rates.
Editorial:
Prostate Cancer Screening, A Racial Dichotomy
In an accompanying
editorial, M. Suzanne Stratton, Ph.D., of the Arizona Cancer Center in Tucson
and Isis Calsoyas, B.S., write, “In this issue of ARCHIVES, Gilligan et al
examine rates of prostate cancer screening in African-American men compared with
men of other races in the United States. Data adjusted for socioeconomic status
and comorbidities in this report show that African-American men are less likely
to undergo routine screening for prostate cancer as recommended by the American
Cancer Society which suggests that greater efforts must be made to advocate
screening in this population to reduce prostate cancer mortality.”
The
editorialists state that “Although these statistics indicate a positive race
association in the high incidence of prostate cancer, race is still a debatable
indicator of cancer incidence. Numerous reports have examined variations in
dietary factors and biological factors, including genetic susceptibility and
testosterone levels, however, findings have thus far been
inconclusive.”
“Gilligan et al highlighted that this analysis was not a
study directed at determining the causality of the higher incidence of prostate
cancer and lower rates of PSA screening in African American men,” they write.
“Therefore, as discussed in their report and reports by other investigators,
more aggressive measures are needed to evaluate the causality of race
association in PSA screening, cancer onset, and mortality
rates.”
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