Ds. May et al., Mammography and breast cancer detection by race and Hispanic ethnicity: results from a national program (United States), CANC CAUSE, 11(8), 2000, pp. 697-705
Objective: Some of the racial and ethnic variation in breast cancer inciden
ce rates may reflect differential use of mammography. We report breast canc
er rates using mammography and diagnostic data from five race/ethnicity gro
ups.
Methods: Mammography data were analyzed for 573,751 women who received brea
st cancer screening between July 1991 and March 1998 from the National Brea
st and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP). Abnormal mammogra
phy rates, breast cancer detection rates, and cancer stage distribution dat
a are presented by race/ethnicity and screening round (first or subsequent)
.
Results: For the first screening round, percentages of abnormal mammographi
es ranged from 7.3% among black women to 9.3% among Asian/Pacific Islander
women. Cancer detection rates ranged from 4.9 cancers per 1000 mammograms f
or Hispanic and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) women to 7.7 per 1000
for white women. Subsequent round rates were lower but varied similarly. A
I/AN women had the highest percentage (68%) of first-round cancers detected
in the early stage (range for the other groups: 52-63%).
Conclusions: Breast cancer detection rates for racial and ethnic groups in
this program varied less than published population-based incidence rates. D
ifferential use of mammography among these groups may account for some of t
he variation reported for breast cancer incidence.