Literature DB >> 10334646

The incidence of gastric carcinoma in Asian migrants to the United States and their descendants.

A Kamineni1, M A Williams, S M Schwartz, L S Cook, N S Weiss.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We examined the incidence of gastric carcinoma in Chinese, Japanese, and Filipino residents of the United States to obtain additional information about the etiology of this disease.
METHODS: The age, race, and birthplace of residents of Hawaii, San Francisco/Oakland, and northwestern Washington who were diagnosed with gastric carcinoma during the period 1973-1986 were obtained from population-based registries, and a special tabulation from the 1980 Census was used to estimate the number of person-years at risk for each category of resident.
RESULTS: The incidence of gastric carcinoma in Japanese-Americans was three to six times higher than that of US-born whites, with the highest rates occurring in those persons born in Japan. The rate in US-born Chinese and Chinese men who immigrated to the US was similar to that of whites, whereas the rate in Chinese female migrants was twice that of white American women. Filipino men, regardless of birthplace, were only at 60% the risk of US-born white men, while their female counterparts had a rate very similar to that of US-born white women. The high incidence observed among Japanese-Americans and Chinese female immigrants was largely restricted to sites other than the gastric cardia.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that dietary and other lifestyle differences between the different generations of Japanese-Americans, and between Japanese residents of the US and Japan may provide clues regarding the etiologies of stomach cancers that arise beyond the gastric cardia.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10334646     DOI: 10.1023/a:1008849014992

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Causes Control        ISSN: 0957-5243            Impact factor:   2.506


  32 in total

1.  Studying cancer incidence and outcomes in immigrants: methodological concerns.

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2.  Case-control study of dietary pattern and other risk factors for gastric cancer.

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3.  Ethnicity is a strong predictor for Helicobacter pylori infection in young women in a multi-ethnic European city.

Authors:  Wouter J den Hollander; I Lisanne Holster; Caroline M den Hoed; Frances van Deurzen; Anneke J van Vuuren; Vincent W Jaddoe; Albert Hofman; Guillermo I Perez Perez; Martin J Blaser; Henriëtte A Moll; Ernst J Kuipers
Journal:  J Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 4.029

4.  Can a gastric cancer risk survey identify high-risk patients for endoscopic screening? A pilot study.

Authors:  Haejin In; Marisa Langdon-Embry; Lauren Gordon; Clyde B Schechter; Judith Wylie-Rosett; Philip E Castle; M Margaret Kemeny; Bruce D Rapkin
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5.  Does immigration play a role in the risk of gastric cancer by site and by histological type? A study of first-generation immigrants in Sweden.

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Review 6.  Racial Disparity in Gastrointestinal Cancer Risk.

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7.  Increased Incidence and Mortality of Gastric Cancer in Immigrant Populations from High to Low Regions of Incidence: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Baldeep S Pabla; Shailja C Shah; Juan E Corral; Douglas R Morgan
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2019-05-30       Impact factor: 11.382

8.  Uncovering nativity disparities in cancer patterns: Multiple imputation strategy to handle missing nativity data in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results data file.

Authors:  Jane R Montealegre; Renke Zhou; E Susan Amirian; Michael E Scheurer
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 6.860

9.  An Investigation into the Recent Increase in Gastric Cancer in the USA.

Authors:  Maya Balakrishnan; Rollin George; Ashish Sharma; David Y Graham; Hoda M Malaty
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 3.199

10.  Treatment and outcomes of gastric cancer among United States-born and foreign-born Asians and Pacific Islanders.

Authors:  Stacey A Dacosta Byfield; Craig C Earle; John Z Ayanian; Ellen P McCarthy
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2009-10-01       Impact factor: 6.860

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