首页> 外文期刊>International Journal of Epidemiology: Official Journal of the International Epidemiological Association >Asian breast cancer survival in the US: a comparison between Asian immigrants, US-born Asian Americans and Caucasians.
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Asian breast cancer survival in the US: a comparison between Asian immigrants, US-born Asian Americans and Caucasians.

机译:在美国的亚洲乳腺癌生存率:亚洲移民,美国出生的亚裔美国人和高加索人之间的比较。

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BACKGROUND: This study examines whether acculturation of Asian American women, assessed by place of birth, is associated with survival after diagnosis of breast cancer. We hypothesized that environmental factors associated with acculturation, such as a high-fat diet, would result in a pattern of better survival for first-generation Asians compared with subsequent-generation Asian Americans. METHODS: Analyses compare survival among women of four ethnic groups (Chinese [n = 1842], Japanese [n = 3319], Filipino [n = 1598] and a random sample of Caucasians [n = 10,000]) who were diagnosed with primary invasive breast carcinoma in three Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER) regions (San Francisco/Oakland, Hawaii, Seattle/Puget Sound) between 1973 and 1994. Analyses by birthplace compare first-generation Asian immigrants with subsequent-generation Asian Americans of the same ethnicity. Analyses were based on the Cox proportional hazards model and adjusted for age at diagnosis, stage of disease, year of diagnosis, type of treatment, marital status, and SEER region. RESULTS: Japanese women had significantly better survival than all other races, but there were no significant differences in survival between Chinese, Filipino, and Caucasian women. There were no significant differences in survival by place of birth within each Asian ethnic group, after adjustment for demographic characteristics, stage of disease, and treatment. CONCLUSION: The findings do not support the hypothesis that acculturation of Asian American women is associated with decreased breast cancer survival.
机译:背景:这项研究检查了按出生地评估的亚裔美国妇女的适应能力是否与乳腺癌诊断后的存活率相关。我们假设与适应相关的环境因素(例如高脂饮食)将导致第一代亚裔美国人比后代亚裔美国人更好的生存模式。方法:分析比较了被诊断患有原发性浸润性疾病的四个族裔(中国人[n = 1842],日本人[n = 3319],菲律宾人[n = 1598]和高加索人的随机样本[n = 10,000])妇女的生存率。 1973年至1994年之间在三个监视,流行病学和最终结果计划(SEER)地区(旧金山/奥克兰,夏威夷,西雅图/普格特海湾)的乳腺癌。按出生地进行的分析比较了第一代亚裔移民与第二代亚裔移民相同种族。分析基于Cox比例风险模型,并针对诊断时的年龄,疾病的阶段,诊断的年份,治疗的类型,婚姻状况和SEER区域进行了调整。结果:日本妇女的生存率明显高于其他种族,但中国人,菲律宾人和白人妇女的生存率没有显着差异。在调整了人口统计学特征,疾病分期和治疗后,每个亚洲种族的出生地生存率均无显着差异。结论:这些发现不支持亚裔美国人女性的文化容忍与乳腺癌生存率下降有关的假说。

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