Md. Pineda et al., Asian breast cancer survival in the US: a comparison between Asian immigrants, US-born Asian Americans and Caucasians, INT J EPID, 30(5), 2001, pp. 976-982
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Background This study examines whether acculturation of Asian American wome
n, assessed by place of birth, is associated with survival after diagnosis
of breast cancer. We hypothesized that environmental factors associated wit
h acculturation, such as a high-fat diet, would result in a pattern of bett
er survival for first-generation Asians compared with subsequent-generation
Asian Americans.
Methods Analyses compare survival among women of four ethnic groups (Chines
e [n = 1842], Japanese [n = 3319], Filipino [n = 1598] and a random sample
of Caucasians [n = 10 000]) who were diagnosed with primary invasive breast
carcinoma in three Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SE
ER) regions (San Francisco/Oakland, Hawaii, Seattle/Puget Sound) between 19
73 and 1994. Analyses by birthplace compare first-generation Asian immigran
ts with subsequent-generation Asian Americans of the same ethnicity. Analys
es were based on the Cox proportional hazards model and adjusted for age at
diagnosis, stage of disease, year of diagnosis, type of treatment, marital
status, and SEER region.
Results Japanese women had significantly better survival than all other rac
es, but there were no significant differences in survival between Chinese,
Filipino, and Caucasian women. There were no significant differences in sur
vival by place of birth within each Asian ethnic group, after adjustment fo
r demographic characteristics, stage of disease, and treatment.
Conclusions The findings do not support the hypothesis that acculturation o
f Asian American women is associated with decreased breast cancer survival.