Title: Increased Breast Cancer Survival Differentials by Race in America
1Increased Breast Cancer Survival Differentials by
Race in America
- Historic Observational Evidence Consistent With a
Health Insurance Hypothesis, 1975 to 2000
2Research Objective
- To learn from our experiences of the past
generation whether or not health care outcomes
(resources) have become more or less equitably
distributed - - African American vs. white people
- - In metropolitan Detroit
- - With breast cancer (sentinel outcome)
3Historical Context 1975 to 2000
- - US health care system is multi-tiered
Uninsured, underinsured, Medicaid, Medicare, and
array of private coverages - - Time of great systemic changes
- - Managed care for-profit proliferation
- - Uninsured population nearly doubled
(increased from 24 to 44 million among those lt
65 years of age) -
4Theoretical Context Systematic Literature Review
- - Race and socioeconomic status (SES) are
strongly associated with health insurance
statuses (ORs 2.0 to 15.0). - - Race, SES and health insurance statuses are all
strongly associated with cancer screens, stages
at diagnosis and access to treatments (ORs 2.0 to
5.0).
5Research Questions
- Given the near 20 improvement in breast cancer
survival during the study period - 1. Has this medical advance been enjoyed
equitably by African American and white women? - 2. Is there a particular African American
disadvantage among those not yet eligible for
Medicare?
6Methods
- Using Historical Cohorts and Focusing on
Interactions, Rather Than Mere Main Effects
7Sample Design
- - Detroit Cancer Registry, SEER
- - Detroit metro 3 counties, 4 million pop
- - Primary invasive breast cancer cases
- - Women, 25 years of age and older
- - Entire most valid cohort
- 1975 to 2000 inclusive followed until December
31, 2001 - - N 57,668
- 10,237 African American and
- 47,431 White people
8Analytic Plan
- - 1970s 1990s cohorts compared, e.g.,
- 1975-80 followed until 1986 vs. 1990-95 until
2001 for 5-year survival analyses - - Analyses of survival used proportional hazards
models. - - Analyses of stages of disease at the time of
diagnosis and treatments (1st year
post-diagnosis) used logistic regression models. - - All models were adjusted for age and year of
diagnosis.
9Results
- Significantly Increased Racial Group Breast
Cancer Survival, Stage and Treatment Differentials
10Race By Cohort Interactionsa on Survival Odds
Ratios (95 CIs)Main Effects of Race Within
Cohort 1970s 1990s
- 1-yr 1.83 (1.60,2.09) 2.07 (1.86,2.31)
- 3-yr 1.67 (1.51,1.86) 2.09 (1.93,2.26)
- 5-yr 1.64 (1.46,1.84) 1.94 (1.79,2.16)
- 10-yr 1.64 (1.40,1.91) 1.88 (1.66,2.13)
- a All minimally significant at p lt .05).
11Race By Age By Cohort Interaction on 5-Year
Survival ORs (95 CIs) Race By
Age Within Cohort Age 1970s 1990s
- lt 65 1.60 (1.39,1.84) 2.06 (1.85,2.30)
- 65 1.74 (1.41,2.16) 1.79 (1.58,2.04)
- The 3-way interaction was significant at p lt
.05).
12Race By Age By Cohort Interaction on Local
Disease ORs (95 CIs) Race By Age
Within Cohort Age 1970s 1990s
- lt 65 1.24 (1.12,1.37) 1.46 (1.35,1.58)
- 65 1.58 (1.36,1.84) 1.56 (1.41,1.72)
- The 3-way interaction was significant at p lt .05).
13Race By Age By Cohort Interactions on Treatments
- Similar interactions were observed on receipt
of surgery (localized disease), radiation
therapy (local regional), chemotherapy and
hormone therapy (regional disease). - All were indicative of particularly increased
African American disadvantages among those not
yet eligible for Medicare.
14Interactions Seem to Reflect Sociologic, Not
Biologic Phenomena
- When four socioeconomic variables were entered
into the analytic models each of the previously
significant interaction terms did not enter - (at p lt .05).
- The four measures were census tract- based
compositional (prevalence of poor and near poor
200 poverty criterion people) and contextual
(median home and rental values) measures of
social position.
15Discussion
The Evidence Supports Race as a Social
Construction The Implementation of Policies
That Would Ensure All Americans Access to
Timely Diagnosis the Best Available Treatments
16Summary
- African American women with breast cancer have
not fully enjoyed contemporary survival advances.
Relative to white patients they are more
disadvantaged today than they were 25 years ago. - Alternative Explanations
- - Social policies and structures affecting health
insurance access have changed drastically during
this time frame. - - Gene-based, biologically-mediated (tumor)
characteristics have not.
17Policy Implications
- - Race and income (type of insurance one has)
still matter very much in American health care. - - Racial and socioeconomic inequities could
probably be eliminated in large measure by
providing universal access to all - - The young and the old
- - The poor and the rich
- - People of color and white people.