Mas

Search:

The good fight

All > Health
The good fight
By: Courtesy of the American Cancer Society
Description: Breast cancer today: Death rate falls for Latinas

Topics:
Posted by admin Tue Nov 30, 1999 00:00:00 PST
Viewed 351 times
0 responses 0 comments
Editor’s note: October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. MÁS encourages readers to take a look at these latest updates on breast cancer prevention, detection and treatment. Then call all your amigas, hermanas, tias and tu madre y abuelita — and tell them to pick up their copy of MÁS and do the same. Look for additional breast cancer articles in MÁS throughout the month:

A decline in breast cancer incidence
The breast cancer death rate in the United States continues to fall by around 2 percent a year, as it has since 1990, according to Breast Cancer Facts & Figures 2007-2008, a report on breast cancer statistics and trends produced every other year by the American Cancer Society. That’s an impressive winning streak for an important indicator of success in the fight against cancer, made possible in large part, the report says, by advances in early detection and treatment.

Those advances have benefited women of some races more than others, data shows. For instance, the cancer death rate for white and Hispanic/Latina women fell by 2.4 percent between 1995 and 2004, but only by 1.6 percent for African-American women. And during the same time period, no change was seen in cancer death rates of Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders or American Indians/Alaska Natives.

Also in this issue, authors note a decline in breast cancer incidence — that is, the rate at which new cancers are diagnosed — but suggest it may be due in part to fewer women getting mammograms.

Death rates differ by race
On whole, the report shows the continuation of a welcome trend — a steady decrease each year in the rate of breast cancer deaths. Thanks to increased efforts at prevention, better methods of detecting cancers early, and treatment advances, American women today are less likely to die of breast cancer than they have been in decades, said Harmon J. Eyre, MD, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society.

Looking at the issue of race — and the socioeconomic and genetic factors associated with race — it becomes clear that this good news is better for some groups of women than for others. “Perhaps most troubling,” said Eyre, “is the striking divergence in long-term mortality trends seen between African-American and white females that began in the early 1980s and that by 2004 had led to death rates being 36 percent higher in African-American women.”

Other key statistics:
An estimated 178,480 new cases of invasive breast cancer in women will be diagnosed in 2007, and approximately 40,460 deaths will be recorded. Only lung cancer accounts for more cancer deaths in women.

In 2004 (the latest year for which figures are available), approximately 2.4 million women living in the US had a history of breast cancer. Breast cancer accounts for more than 1 in 4 cancers in U.S. women.

On average, the breast cancer death rate decreased by 2.2 percent each year between 1990 and 2004. Younger women saw an even more significant decline during that period.

Breast cancer incidence among white women — that is, the rate at which new breast cancers are diagnosed in this group — fell by 3.7 percent a year during 2001-2004. Also declining during this time: the use of mammography and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) by white women. There was no significant change in breast cancer incidence among African-American women during this time, coinciding with stable mammography rates and HRT use.

Among women 50 and older, incidence rates have been on a steep decline (by 4.8 percent per year) since 2001. Among women under age 50, incidence rates have remained stable since 1986.

Since 2000, the incidence rate of smaller tumors has declined by 3.8 percent per year. In contrast, the incidence rate of larger tumors (more than 5 cm.) has increased by 1.7 percent per year since 1992. (Larger tumor size at diagnosis is associated with decreased survival.) Both trends may be tied to an increase in obesity in postmenopausal women, HRT use, or both.

Risk factors

The report details the major risk factors for breast cancer that women have some control over. These include:

Weight — Obesity increases a woman’s risk of postmenopausal (but not premenopausal) breast cancer, as does weight gain during adulthood.

Alcohol use — Women who drink just 2 alcoholic beverages a day face a 21 percent increase in their risk for breast cancer.

Secondhand smoke — Although most studies have found no link between cigarette smoking and breast cancer, the link between secondhand smoke and breast cancer remains controversial.

Exercise — Women can lower their risk of breast cancer by exercising vigorously for 45 to 60 minutes on five or more days per week. Postmenopausal women can lower their risk, according to one study, with any level of physical activity performed on a regular basis.
Send to a Friend Report a Violation

Log In

Welcome to MÁS Magazine!

To receive MÁS for free by mail, fill out this online form or call 661-716-8640.
Click below to:
Learn more about us!

Forgot password?

Post Something! Register Now

Weather