Literature DB >> 29582015

Disparities in breast cancer tumor characteristics, treatment, time to treatment, and survival probability among African American and white women.

Kevin Chu Foy1,2, James L Fisher3,4, Maryam B Lustberg2,5,6, Darrell M Gray2,7, Cecilia R DeGraffinreid2, Electra D Paskett2,3,4,8.   

Abstract

African American (AA) women have a 42% higher breast cancer death rate compared to white women despite recent advancements in management of the disease. We examined racial differences in clinical and tumor characteristics, treatment and survival in patients diagnosed with breast cancer between 2005 and 2014 at a single institution, the James Cancer Hospital, and who were included in the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry in Columbus OH. Statistical analyses included likelihood ratio chi-square tests for differences in proportions, as well as univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards regressions to examine associations between race and overall and progression-free survival probabilities. AA women made up 10.2% (469 of 4593) the sample. Average time to onset of treatment after diagnosis was almost two times longer in AA women compared to white women (62.0 days vs 35.5 days, p < 0.0001). AA women were more likely to report past or current tobacco use, experience delays in treatment, have triple negative and late stage breast cancer, and were less likely to receive surgery, especially mastectomy and reconstruction following mastectomy. After adjustment for confounding factors (age, grade, and surgery), overall survival probability was significantly associated with race (HR = 1.33; 95% CI 1.03-1.72). These findings highlight the need for efforts focused on screening and receipt of prompt treatment among AA women diagnosed with breast cancer.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 29582015      PMCID: PMC5861087          DOI: 10.1038/s41523-018-0059-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NPJ Breast Cancer        ISSN: 2374-4677


Introduction

In 2017, breast cancer remains the most commonly diagnosed cancer (29%) in women in the United States.[1] Since 2004, incidence rates have been relatively stable after a 7% decrease was witnessed between 2002 and 2003.[2] It is expected that in 2017 about 41,070 women will die from breast cancer while almost 255,180 new cases will be diagnosed.[1] African American (AA) women have a 42% higher breast cancer death rate compared to white women.[3] Despite recent advancements in diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer, which have significantly lowered the mortality rates in white women, AA women continue to have the highest mortality rates of the disease.[4,5] The disparity in incidence and mortality between AA women and white women is partly due to a significant improvement in survival among white women that is lacking in AA women.[6,7] A study by DeSantis et al.[8] showed that, between 1975 and 2004, there was a decrease in the breast cancer mortality rate in white women in all 50 states while, among AA women, the rate decreased in only 11 states and increased substantially in two states. Previous reports have shown that, in addition to mortality and survival disparities, AA women are more commonly diagnosed at a younger age with around 33% being younger than 50 years compared to only 22% of white women;[9] further, AA women are twice as likely to be diagnosed with breast cancer below the age of 35 when compared to white women.[10] A higher percentage of AA women are diagnosed with late-stage disease, compared to white women, and fewer AA women have smaller (<2 cm) tumors.[10,11] The purpose of this study was to examine disparities, among women diagnosed and/or treated at a single institution, the James Cancer Hospital, between AA and white women based on tumor and clinical characteristics (tumor receptor expression, stage at diagnosis, grade, lymph node involvement), treatment (e.g., surgery, radiotherapy therapy, chemotherapy, adjuvant hormone therapy and prophylactic mastectomy), time to treatment, overall survival (OS), and progression-free survival (PFS) probability.

Results

Demographics, tobacco and alcohol use history, and time to treatment onset

As shown in Table 1, the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry included 469 AA and 4124 white women diagnosed with breast cancer from 2005 to 2014. AA women and white women had identical mean ages at diagnosis. Significantly more AA women were not married and reported past or current tobacco use, while significantly more white women reported past or current alcohol use. Mean number of days between diagnosis and treatment was significantly greater for AA women; further, the proportion of AA women with more than 90 days between diagnosis and treatment onset was significantly greater than that for white women.
Table 1

Patient demographics and time to onset of treatment among African American and white breast cancer among patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

White N (%)African American N (%)p-value
4124 (89.8)469 (10.2)
Age at diagnosis
Mean (years)57.457.4NS
≤40398 (9.6)48 (10.2)
41–50857 (20.8)99 (21.1)
51–641718 (41.7)186 (39.7)
≥651151 (27.9)136 (29.0)
Marital status at diagnosis
Not married1289 (31.3)307 (65.5)p < 0.0001
Married2746 (66.5)145 (30.9)
Unknown89 (2.2)17 (3.6)
Tobacco use history
Past/Current use1432 (34.7)186 (39.7)p < 0.0001
Never used2310 (56.0)216 (46.0)
Unknown382 (9.3)67 (14.3)
Alcohol use history
Past/Current Use1833 (44.5)141 (30.1)p < 0.0001
Never Used1792 (43.5)244 (52.0)
Unknown499 (12.1)84 (17.9)
Time to treatment onset
Mean (days)35.562.0p < 0.0001
≤301713 (41.5)174 (37.1)
31–601480 (35.9)147 (31.3)
61–90321 (7.8)40 (8.5)
>90610 (14.8)108 (23.1)
Patient demographics and time to onset of treatment among African American and white breast cancer among patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

Tumor characteristics and lymph node involvement

As shown in Table 2, a significantly greater proportion of AA women were diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer, and a significantly greater proportion of AA women were diagnosed with advanced (regional and distant) stages of breast cancer. No significant differences by race were observed for grade. There were significantly greater proportions of AA women with both positive and unknown lymph node involvement compared to white women.
Table 2

Receptor status, stage at diagnosis, grade, and lymph node involvement among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

White N (%) 4124 (89.8)aAfrican American N* (%) 469 (10.2)ap-value
Receptor status
Hormone receptor positive/HER2 negative3038 (71.2)286 (59.1)p < 0.0001
HER2 positive382 (9.0)48 (9.9)
Triple negative845 (19.8)150 (31.0)
Stage at diagnosis
In situ1866 (45.3)158 (33.7)p < 0.0001
Localized1489 (36.1)179 (38.2)
Regional487 (11.8)88 (18.8)
Distant282 (6.8)44 (9.4)
Grade
I791 (19.8)96 (20.5)NS
II1607 (39.0)188 (40.1)
III1456 (35.3)153 (32.6)
IV3 (0.1)2 (0.4)
Unknown267 (6.5)30 (6.4)
Lymph node involvement
02417 (58.6)222 (47.3)p < 0.0001
≥11317 (31.9)163 (34.8)
Unknown390 (9.5)84 (17.9)

aNote that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding

Receptor status, stage at diagnosis, grade, and lymph node involvement among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014 aNote that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding

Treatment

As shown in Table 3, hormonal therapy, among those with hormone receptor positive breast cancer, was significantly more common among AA women. Surgery was significantly less common among AA women, compared to white women. Specifically, mastectomy, reconstruction after mastectomy, and prophylactic mastectomy and reconstruction in the unaffected breast were significantly less common among AA women. Although breast-conserving surgery was less common among AA women, the difference was not statistically significant. Table 4 shows treatment according to stage at diagnosis. Significantly fewer AA women received radiotherapy for those diagnosed with regional stage breast cancer, and breast-conserving surgery for those diagnosed with in situ and localized stage disease. Among those diagnosed with hormone receptor positive breast cancer at the in situ and localized stages, significantly more AA women received hormonal therapy. Further, among those diagnosed with regional and distant stage disease, significantly more AA women received immunotherapy. Last, among those diagnosed with localized breast cancer, significantly more AA women received neoadjuvant therapy.
Table 3

Treatment among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

White N (%) 4124 (89.8)aAfrican American N (%) 469 (10.2)ap-value
Treatment
Chemotherapy2291 (53.7)273 (56.4)NS
Hormonal therapy (among those hormone receptor positive)2235 (68.1) (out of 3280)244 (78.0) (out of 313)0.0003
Radiotherapy2276 (55.2)252 (53.7)NS
Immunotherapy359 (8.7)42 (9.0)NS
Neoadjuvant therapy576 (14.0)69 (14.7)NS
Surgery3871 (93.8)424 (90.4)0.0251
Surgery type (among those receiving surgery)
Mastectomy1674 (40.6)169 (36.0)p = 0.033
Reconstruction (among those receiving mastectomy)936 (55.9)86 (50.9)p = 0.032
Breast-conserving surgery1971 (47.8)214 (45.6)NS
Radiotherapy (among those receiving breast conserving surgery)1971 (100.0)213 (99.5)NS
Prophylactic mastectomy and reconstruction in unaffected breast461 (11.2)37 (7.9)p = 0.050

aNote that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding

Table 4

Treatment according to stage at diagnosis among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

In situ N (%)Localized N (%)Regional N (%)Distant N (%)
TreatmentaWhite 1866 (45.3)Black 158 (33.7)White 1489 (36.1)Black 179 (38.2)White 487 (11.8)Black 88 (18.8)White 282 (6.8)Black 44 (9.4)
Chemotherapy558 (29.9)45 (28.7)1093 (73.4)126 (70.4)446 (91.6)78 (88.6)186 (66.1)32 (72.7)
Hormonal therapy (among those hormone receptor positive) 1100 (68.6) 101 (82.8) 751 (68.6) 87 (83.7) 250 (69.8)41 (73.2)134 (59.8)15 (48.4)
Radiotherapy1009 (54.1)80 (51.0)752 (50.5)96 (53.6) 410 (84.2) 62 (70.5) 104 (36.8)15 (34.1)
Immunotherapy87 (4.7)11 (7.0)150 (10.1)18 (10.1) 73 (15.0) 20 (22.7) 47 (16.8) 13 (29.5)
Neoadjuvant therapy82 (4.4)6 (3.8) 266 (17.9) 57 (31.8) 135 (27.8)26 (29.5)27 (9.6)13 (29.5)
Surgery1828 (98.0)148 (93.6)1463 (98.3)168 (93.8)475 (97.5)81 (92.0)251 (89.0)38 (86.4)
Breast-conserving surgery 762 (40.8) 56 (35.4) 670 (45.0) 74 (41.3) 215 (44.1)41 (46.6)108 (38.3)21 (47.7)
Radiotherapy (among those receiving breast-conserving surgery)609 (79.9)44 (78.6)524 (78.2)60 (81.1)173 (80.5)35 (85.4)85 (78.7)17 (81.0)

aBolded numbers and percentages represent statistically significant Black-White differences. Note that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding

Treatment among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014 aNote that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding Treatment according to stage at diagnosis among African American and white breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014 aBolded numbers and percentages represent statistically significant Black-White differences. Note that sample sizes do not always add to the total and percents do not always add to 100.0% due to missing data and rounding

Overall survival and progression-free survival

The mean follow-up period for AA women (1734 days) was significantly shorter than the mean follow-up period for white women (1926 days). Table 5 shows results from univariate and multivariate regressions. Overall survival probability and PFS was lower among AA women, compared to white women (HR = 1.34; 95% CI 1.05–1.70; HR = 1.33; 95% CI 1.07–1.6, respectively). Additional factors associated with higher OS probability in univariate regressions were: younger age at diagnosis, married marital status, past or current alcohol use, late stage at diagnosis, undifferentiated or poorly differentiated grade, triple negative status, receipt of any type of surgery, receipt of radiotherapy, receipt of chemotherapy, receipt of hormonal therapy (among women with hormone positive breast cancer), and longer (31–60 days) time to treatment. Additional factors associated with higher PFS probability in univariate regressions were: past or current alcohol use, undifferentiated or poorly differentiated grade, triple negative status, receipt of any type of surgery, receipt of radiotherapy, receipt of chemotherapy, receipt of hormonal therapy (among women with hormone positive breast cancer), and longer (31–60 days) time to treatment. Factors remaining in final models for both OS and PFS (each model developed independently), other than race, were: age at diagnosis, undifferentiated or poorly differentiated grade, and receipt of any type of surgery. Adjustment for confounding by additional factors did not substantively alter, or remove the statistically significant impact, of AA race on OS probability. Adjustment for confounding by age, grade and surgery attenuated the impact, and removed the statistical significance of AA race on PFS probability. Time to treatment was not statistically significant in final models of OS and PFS probability and time to treatment did not substantively alter the impact of AA race on OS and PFS probability. It should be noted that it was possible for a factor to be strongly associated with survival probability and not be in the final model, if the factor did not alter the association between race and survival probability (e.g., stage at diagnosis).
Table 5

Hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals reflecting univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models of associations between race and overall and progression-free survival probability among breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

Overall survivalProgression-free survival
Hazard ratio (95% CI)Hazard ratio (95% CI)
Univariate regressions
African American race (ref: white)1.34 (1.05–1.70)1.33 (1.07–1.65)
Age at diagnosis (per year)1.00 (1.00–1.00)1.00 (1.00–1.00)
Married marital status (ref: unmarried)0.90 (0.76–1.06)0.88 (0.76–1.03)
Past or current tobacco use (ref: no use)0.99 (0.84–1.16)1.08 (0.94–1.26)
Past or current alcohol use (ref: no use)0.81 (0.69–0.95)0.85 (0.74–0.98)
Regional and distant stages at diagnosis (ref: in situ and localized)1.10 (1.03–1.22)1.14 (0.95–1.36)
Poorly differentiated or undifferentiated grade (ref: well and moderately differentiated)1.74 (1.47–2.05)1.72 (1.48–2.01)
Triple negative (ER-/PR-/HER2-; ref: other hormone receptor and HER2 status combinations)1.49 (1.24–1.79)1.61 (1.38–1.89)
At least 1 lymph node involved (ref: no nodes involved)1.13 (0.95–1.35)1.13 (0.96–1.32)
Surgery (ref: no surgery)0.36 (0.29–0.44)0.29 (0.24–0.34)
Radiotherapy (ref: no radiotherapy)0.83 (0.71–0.98)0.75 (0.65–0.86)
Chemotherapy (ref: no chemotherapy)1.31 (1.11–1.54)1.19 (1.02–1.38)
Hormonal therapy (ref: no hormonal therapy)0.69 (0.59–0.81)0.61 (0.52–0.70)
Time to treatment
≤30 days (ref.)
31–60 days4.32 (1.72–10.83)3.51 (1.43–8.61)
61–90 days1.24 (0.30–5.11)1.32 (0.42–4.16)
>90 days1.44 (0.52–4.00)1.03 (0.38–2.79)
Multivariate model
African American race (ref: white)1.33 (1.03–1.72)1.20 (0.95–1.52)
Age at diagnosis (per year)1.00 (1.00–1.00)1.00 (1.00–1.00)
Poorly differentiated or undifferentiated grade (ref: well and moderately differentiated)1.78 (1.50–2.11)1.72 (1.47–2.00)
Surgery (ref: no surgery)0.34 (0.27–0.41)0.28 (0.23–0.34)
Hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals reflecting univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models of associations between race and overall and progression-free survival probability among breast cancer patients treated at the James Cancer Hospital from 2005 to 2014

Discussion

The aim of this study was to assess the disparities between AA women and white women diagnosed with breast cancer at a single institution, The James Cancer Hospital, between 2005 and 2014. AA women were more likely to report past or current tobacco use, experience delays in treatment, have triple negative and late stage breast cancer, and were less likely to receive surgery, especially mastectomy and reconstruction following mastectomy. After adjustment for confounding factors, AA women had significantly lower OS probability. Factors that may contribute to disparities in risk of death from breast cancer and associated survival probability include social and behavioral factors, screening behavior disparities, and differences in tumor biology and treatment. Tobacco smoking increases risk of death from breast cancer.[12] In the present study, AA women were more likely to report current or past tobacco use. AA women were also more likely to be unmarried and partner availability may affect breast cancer survival outcomes with married or partnered couples showing improved prognosis, possibly attributable to increased social support.[13] A higher prevalence of divorce and separation, as well as the associated psychosocial stress, experienced by AA women may also contribute to the observed lower survival probability. Screening behavior and access to screening may contribute to disparities in risk of death from breast cancer and survival probability. Indeed, we observed that AA women were more likely to be diagnosed with advanced stages of breast cancer and to have lymph node involvement. No screening information was available in the present study. However, other studies have reported that AA women and other minority groups are less likely to visit centers with digital mammography and with designated imaging experts to read the films.[14,15] Differences in tumor biology may also contribute to the race disparity in risk of death from breast cancer and survival probability. Triple negative breast cancer is more common among AA women, and AA women, irrespective of age and stage at diagnosis, have been found to present with more grade III tumors, while white women were more likely to present with grade I and II tumors;[16,17] however, these patterns in grade were not observed in the present study. The racial disparity in breast cancer survival may also be partially attributable to differences in patterns of care. Even after adjustment for age, stage at diagnosis, receptor expression status and socioeconomic status, AA women have been found to remain twice as likely as white women to die from breast cancer.[18] We found that significantly fewer AA women received surgery overall, and were less likely to receive breast-conserving surgery among those with in situ and localized breast cancers. AA women were significantly more likely to receive hormonal therapy which may prevent cancer recurrence in women diagnosed with early stage hormone receptor positive breast cancer.[19] There were also disparities in radiotherapy (among those with regional stage disease) and in mastectomy, reconstruction after mastectomy, and prophylactic mastectomy. For all stages combined, although breast-conserving surgery was less common among AA women, the difference was not statistically significant. Overall, white women had higher OS and PFS, both after adjustment for confounding factors (only statistically significant for OS). Although significant differences in time to treatment were observed between AA and white women, these differences were not significantly associated with OS or PFS probability after adjustment for other factors. Silber et al.[20] showed that AA women experience significant delays in onset of treatment after breast cancer diagnosis when compared to white women and are twice as likely to wait for more than three months before initiating treatment. Results from the present study confirm this finding; moreover, more AA women in this study waited for more than 90 days before initiating treatment, similar to findings previously reported. The study was not without limitations. First, only women diagnosed with breast cancer at The James Cancer Hospital were included. As a result, the findings reported here may not be generalizable to populations outside of (largely Central) Ohio, the Midwestern United States, and/or those treated at a Comprehensive Cancer Center. However, the limitation observed in the generalizability of this single institution study may be somewhat balanced by the fact that many results reported in other investigations have been confirmed in one group of patients at one institution, in which there is likely less variation in potentially confounding factors such as institution-based screening, diagnosis and treatment patterns. Second, we relied on information available in the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry and, as such, we were unable to assess factors like socio-economic status (including insurance status), residential distance from the medical center, access to transportation, obesity, and comorbid conditions; therefore, it was not possible to identify and examine the potential confounding of comorbid conditions that may have contributed to the lower survival probability observed for AA women. Indeed, it may be important to consider confounding by comorbid conditions like diabetes and cardiovascular diseases, as previously illustrated by Tammemagi et al.[21] Third, the absence of information about loss to follow-up may have resulted in inaccurate estimates of survival probability; however, this absence is (unfortunately) standard in survival analyses of cancer registry data, including SEER data. Lastly, the mean follow-up period for AA women (1734 days) was significantly shorter than the mean follow-up period for white women (1926 days), and this difference may have biased results. This study showed that factors contributing to breast cancer disparities are diverse and may occur as a result of interplay between causes occurring at multiple levels, from behavioral risk factors to treatment and survivorship. In order to reduce breast cancer disparities, it is paramount that we fully understand the complex interplay of key factors. This is in line with one of the main objectives of the nationwide strategy to improve health outcomes, as outlined in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010.[22] As proposed by Daly et al.[11] it is important to design interventions that can help reduce the racial disparity in outcomes between AA and white women and these interventions should follow a combination approach involving increased insurance coverage, patient education, patient navigation, and substantive changes in the health care delivery and referral system.

Methods

Study population and data sources

We conducted a study of data from the retrospective chart review of breast cancer patients from the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry.[23] Data were obtained from 469 AA women and 4124 white women diagnosed with primary breast cancer between 2005 and 2014. All data included in this study were extracted from medical records and patients were not contacted for the purpose of this study. Due to the retrospective nature of this study of cancer registry data, it was not necessary to obtain informed consent from patients; therefore, a waiver of informed consent was obtained from the OSU Institutional Review Board. Information about the following factors was examined: demographics, including race, age at diagnosis, and marital status; tobacco and alcohol use history; clinical factors, including tumor receptor expression, stage at diagnosis, grade, lymph node involvement, time to onset of treatment, treatment; vital status; and dates of diagnosis, treatment, recurrence, and death. Stage at diagnosis was characterized using a summary measure with categories of in situ, localized, regional and distant stages. The grade/differentiation was classified using the system developed by the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries (NAACCR) and the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program, which classifies tumors as well differentiated, moderately differentiated, poorly differentiated, and undifferentiated. For OS, survival time was characterized as the number of days between date of diagnosis and either date of death or date of the end of study (May 1, 2016). For PFS, survival time was characterized as the number of days between date of diagnosis and either date of recurrence, death or date of the end of study (May 1, 2016). Cause of death was not collected by the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry; as a result, we were not able to examine cause-specific death rates or cause-specific survival. Vital status was determined by the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry using several sources of information. These included: death follow-back from the Ohio Cancer Incidence Surveillance System (OCISS), the central cancer registry for the State of Ohio, Integrated Health Information Systems (IHIS), The Social Security Death Index (SSDI), obituaries and social media. These sources of vital status information are similar to those used by the SEER Program.

Statistical analyses

Percentages were used to describe demographic, behavioral, clinical and outcome information according to race. Likelihood ratio chi square tests were used to test for statistically significant differences between race and selected characteristics, including survival outcomes. The log-rank test was used to compare the survival probabilities. Cox proportional hazard regressions were used to examine OS and PFS while adjusting for additional relevant clinical covariates, as allowed, based on the number of events per group. Potential confounders of associations between race and both PFS and OS were those that were at least marginally significant (p < 0.10) in univariate regressions of associations with OS and PFS. A potential confounder remained in the final model if the factor was statistically significant and removal of the potential confounder altered the regression coefficient of the primary factor of interest (race) considerably (at least 10%). For each covariate remaining in a model, the assumption of proportional hazard functions was tested by visually examining the plot of the hazard function for each level of the factor of interest, and by testing the statistical significance of a term in the model reflecting the multiplicative interaction between the time variable and the factor of interest. (For all models subsequently presented, no substantive violations of the proportional hazards assumption were identified.) Alpha was set at 0.05 for all statistical tests. SAS software version 9.4, was used to conduct statistical analyses.[24]

Data availability

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry, but restrictions apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license for the current study, and so are not publicly available. Data are however available from the authors upon reasonable request and with permission of the Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute Cancer Registry.
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Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 5.942

7.  Engaging young African American women breast cancer survivors: A novel storytelling approach to identify patient-centred research priorities.

Authors:  Alice Yan; Sandra Millon-Underwood; Alonzo Walker; Caitlin Patten; Debra Nevels; Keith Dookeran; Rose Hennessy; Mary Jo Knobloch; Leonard Egede; Melinda Stolley
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 3.377

8.  Shorter delay to treatment by integrated diagnostic services and NGO-provided support among breast cancer patients in two Brazilian referral centres.

Authors:  Lorena Sofia Dos Santos Andrade; Tácila Thamires De Melo Santos; Milena Edite Case de Oliveira; Kedma Anne Lima Gomes; Adriana Raquel Araújo Pereira Soares; Tiago Almeida de Oliveira; Mathias Weller
Journal:  J Public Health Res       Date:  2021-03-10

9.  Communication Tools to Support Advance Care Planning and Hospital Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Design Process.

Authors:  Joanna Paladino; Suzanne Mitchell; Namita Mohta; Joshua R Lakin; Nora Downey; Erik K Fromme; Sue Gullo; Evan Benjamin; Justin J Sanders
Journal:  Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf       Date:  2020-10-24

10.  The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Cancer Care and Health-Related Quality of Life of Non-Hispanic Black/African American, Hispanic/Latina and Non-Hispanic White Women Diagnosed with Breast Cancer in the U.S.: A Mixed-Methods Study Protocol.

Authors:  Chiara Acquati; Tzuan A Chen; Isabel Martinez Leal; Shahnjayla K Connors; Arooba A Haq; Anastasia Rogova; Stephanie Ramirez; Lorraine R Reitzel; Lorna H McNeill
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-12-11       Impact factor: 4.614

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