Higher Breast Cancer Risk Among Immigrant Asian American Women Than Among US-Born Asian American Women

Given rising rates of breast cancer in parts of Asia, immigrant Asian American women in the United States may have higher rates of breast cancer than previously anticipated. This study examined breast cancer risk among Asian American women by nativity and percentage of life lived in the United State...

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Veröffentlicht in:Preventing chronic disease 2019-02, Vol.16, p.E20, Article 180221
Hauptverfasser: Morey, Brittany N, Gee, Gilbert C, von Ehrenstein, Ondine S, Shariff-Marco, Salma, Canchola, Alison J, Yang, Juan, Allen, Laura, Lee, Sandra S-J, Bautista, Roxanna, La Chica, Trish, Tseng, Winston, Chang, Pancho, Gomez, Scarlett Lin
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container_issue
container_start_page E20
container_title Preventing chronic disease
container_volume 16
creator Morey, Brittany N
Gee, Gilbert C
von Ehrenstein, Ondine S
Shariff-Marco, Salma
Canchola, Alison J
Yang, Juan
Allen, Laura
Lee, Sandra S-J
Bautista, Roxanna
La Chica, Trish
Tseng, Winston
Chang, Pancho
Gomez, Scarlett Lin
description Given rising rates of breast cancer in parts of Asia, immigrant Asian American women in the United States may have higher rates of breast cancer than previously anticipated. This study examined breast cancer risk among Asian American women by nativity and percentage of life lived in the United States, accounting for established breast cancer risk factors. We analyzed a breast cancer case-control data set of Asian American women living in the San Francisco Bay Area; this data set included 132 cases of women with breast cancer selected from a Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results cancer registry and 438 Asian American women without diagnosed breast cancer matched to cases by age and country of origin. We used logistic regression to compare 3 Asian American groups: US-born, immigrants who lived 50% or more of their life in the United States, and immigrants who lived less than 50% of their life in the United States. In the minimally adjusted and fully adjusted models, both groups of immigrant Asian American women had higher risk of breast cancer than US-born Asian American women. In the fully adjusted model, compared with US-born Asian American women, immigrant Asian American women who lived more than 50% of their life in United States were on average 3 times as likely (odds ratio = 3.00; 95% confidence interval, 1.56-5.75) and immigrants who lived less than 50% of their life in United States were on average 2.46 times as likely (odds ratio = 2.46; 95% confidence interval, 1.21-4.99) to have breast cancer. We found no difference in fully adjusted odds ratios of having breast cancer between the 2 immigrant groups. This study provides preliminary evidence that breast cancer risk among immigrant Asian American women may be higher than among their US-born counterparts.
doi_str_mv 10.5888/pcd16.180221
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Adult
Asia - ethnology
Asian - statistics & numerical data
Asian People - statistics & numerical data
Breast Neoplasms - ethnology
Case-Control Studies
Emigrants and Immigrants - statistics & numerical data
Female
Humans
Incidence
Middle Aged
Original Research
Registries
Risk Factors
Time Factors
United States - epidemiology
Young Adult
title Higher Breast Cancer Risk Among Immigrant Asian American Women Than Among US-Born Asian American Women
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