Racial and ethnic disparities in a state‐wide registry of patients with pancreatic cancer and an exploratory investigation of cancer cachexia as a contributor to observed inequities

Pancreatic cancer (PC) is characterized by racial/ethnic disparities and the debilitating muscle‐wasting condition, cancer cachexia. Florida ranks second in the number of PC deaths and has a large and understudied minority population. We examined the primary hypothesis that PC incidence and mortalit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer medicine (Malden, MA) MA), 2019-06, Vol.8 (6), p.3314-3324
Hauptverfasser: Permuth, Jennifer B., Clark Daly, Ashley, Jeong, Daniel, Choi, Jung W., Cameron, Miles E., Chen, Dung‐Tsa, Teer, Jamie K., Barnett, Tracey E., Li, Jiannong, Powers, Benjamin D., Kumar, Nagalakshmi B., George, Thomas J., Ali, Karla N., Huynh, Tri, Vyas, Shraddha, Gwede, Clement K., Simmons, Vani N., Hodul, Pamela J., Carballido, Estrella M., Judge, Andrew R., Fleming, Jason B., Merchant, Nipun, Trevino, Jose G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pancreatic cancer (PC) is characterized by racial/ethnic disparities and the debilitating muscle‐wasting condition, cancer cachexia. Florida ranks second in the number of PC deaths and has a large and understudied minority population. We examined the primary hypothesis that PC incidence and mortality rates may be highest among Black Floridians and the secondary hypothesis that biological correlates of cancer cachexia may underlie disparities. PC incidence and mortality rates were estimated by race/ethnicity, gender, and county using publicly available state‐wide cancer registry data that included approximately 2700 Black, 25 200 Non‐Hispanic White (NHW), and 3300 Hispanic/Latino (H/L) Floridians diagnosed between 2004 and 2014. Blacks within Florida experienced a significantly (P 
ISSN:2045-7634
2045-7634
DOI:10.1002/cam4.2180