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ASIAN WOMEN MORE LIKELY TO SURVIVE BREAST CANCER
(Tuesday July 29, 2003)
South
Asian women* living in England are more likely to survive breast
cancer than other women, Cancer Research UK scientists revealed
today. Researchers
also found that mortality rates in women of South Asian origin with
breast cancer were up to 18 per cent lower than in non-South Asian
women with the disease. The
study, published in today's British Journal of Cancer**, is the
first to examine differences in breast cancer survival between ethnic
groups in Britain. The findings will help doctors target their work
towards people of different ethnic backgrounds and cultures.
Examining
ethnic variation in cancer survival in the UK is difficult, as ethnicity
is not often recorded on medical records. So Cancer Research UK
scientist Dr Isabel dos Santos Silva and her colleagues, working
at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, used an established
method of name analysis to identify patients of South Asian ethnicity
in the Thames Cancer Registry.
The
analysis showed that 10-year survival rates for women diagnosed
with breast cancer were 73 per cent for South Asian women and 65
per cent for non-South Asians. After taking into account the baseline
mortality of women of a similar age in the general population, South
Asian women with breast cancer had 18% lower mortality than non-South
Asian cases.
Dr
dos Santos Silva, who led the research, says: "These findings
complement previous studies showing that South Asian women are at
lower risk of getting breast cancer than other women in England.
Our new results suggest that South Asian women who develop breast
cancer may also have better survival compared with non-South Asian
cases. "Further
work will be need to confirm these findings and to explore the reasons
behind them", Dr dos Santos Silva says. Until
further work is done, scientists can only speculate on what could
be causing any differences in survival.
"Possibilities
worth exploring are ethnic differences in the biological characteristics
of the cancer, factors such as diet and alcohol consumption, and
access to and compliance with effective treatments. Many of the
South Asian women in this study lived in or near central London
- and their proximity to teaching hospitals offering the newest
treatments might have been a factor", she adds.
The
findings don't support those of previous studies suggesting that
South Asian women, particularly Muslims, are less likely than other
women to attend breast cancer screening or to go to their GPs if
they note anything abnormal in their breasts. The new research shows
that South Asian women in South East England are not presenting
with more advanced breast cancer than non-South Asian women.
Dr
dos Santos Silva says: "This study also emphasises that survival
has improved in recent years in both ethnic groups, as a result
of increasing breast cancer awareness, the advance of new treatments
for breast cancer, and the introduction of the national breast screening
programme."
Dr
Richard Sullivan, Head of Clinical Programmes at Cancer Research
UK, which owns the British Journal of Cancer, says: "The study
of ethnic variation in cancer survival has been neglected in the
past. Ethnicity is often not recorded on medical records, so the
data can be difficult to gather. Pinpointing
what causes differing survival will be challenging work, but the
knowledge yielded will enable doctors to tailor their work towards
the needs of individual groups."
REFERENCE
*Classified
as those with family roots in the Indian subcontinent.
**BJC Vol. 89 (3). The records of 51,238 women (1037 of them South
Asian) with breast cancer were included in the analysis.
Visit
the CancerHelp UK website (www.cancerhelp.org.uk)
for clear, easy to understand information about cancer and cancer
treatments.
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