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A collaborative study of differences in the survival rates of black patients and white patients with cancer

In 1983, the National Cancer Institute began a social‐epidemiologic study of possible behavioral and biologic determinants of black/white racial disparities in cancer survival. The design, methodology, underlying hypotheses, and patient accrual of this study are discussed. Survival differences in fo...

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Published in:Cancer 1992-05, Vol.69 (9), p.2349-2360
Main Authors: Howard, Jan, Hankey, Benjamin F., Greenberg, Raymond S., Austin, Donald F., Coma, Pelayo, Chen, Vivien W., Durako, Steve
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Language:English
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container_end_page 2360
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2349
container_title Cancer
container_volume 69
creator Howard, Jan
Hankey, Benjamin F.
Greenberg, Raymond S.
Austin, Donald F.
Coma, Pelayo
Chen, Vivien W.
Durako, Steve
description In 1983, the National Cancer Institute began a social‐epidemiologic study of possible behavioral and biologic determinants of black/white racial disparities in cancer survival. The design, methodology, underlying hypotheses, and patient accrual of this study are discussed. Survival differences in four organ sites are investigated: cancers of the uterine corpus, breast, bladder, and colon. The first three sites were chosen because of significant observed black/white differentials in survival. Although racial disparities in survival from colon cancer are less prominent, this site was included because it is a leading cause of deaths attributable to cancer, because regional variations have been observed in black/white survival disparities, and because colon data permit cross‐gender comparisons. Data collection centers for the study included the Georgia Center for Cancer Statistics, the Louisiana Tumor Registry, and the California Tumor Registry. Probability samples of patients newly diagnosed with these cancers were drawn from the areas served by these registries. Diagnostic years of eligibility were 1985 to 1986 for breast and colon cancer, and 1985 to 1987 for bladder and uterine corpus cancer. Data were collected by personal interview, medical records , physician records, and pathology review. Analyses focus on seven main explanatory hypotheses.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/1097-0142(19920501)69:9<2349::AID-CNCR2820690925>3.0.CO;2-7
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subjects Adult
African Continental Ancestry Group
Aged
Biological and medical sciences
Colonic Neoplasms - mortality
Colonic Neoplasms - pathology
European Continental Ancestry Group
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Neoplasms - mortality
Survival Rate
Tumors
Urinary Bladder Neoplasms - mortality
Urinary Bladder Neoplasms - pathology
title A collaborative study of differences in the survival rates of black patients and white patients with cancer
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