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Home » Lung Cancer

Oncology NEWS International. Vol. 19 No. 4
Focus on Breast Cancer 

Study sheds light on lung cancer and African Americans

By GREG FREIHERR | April 15, 2010

African Americans have a higher mortality rate from lung cancer than Caucasians, a fact first discovered in the early 1980s. For decades, researchers have looked for differences in access to care, rates of surgery, and patient preferences to explain the disparity. Now it seems the answer may relate at least partly to the way African Americans think about lung cancer, according to a survey conducted by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Among the findings was that African Americans are more likely than whites, 53% vs 37%, to say they are confused by too many recommendations on how to prevent lung cancer, according to the results published in the journal Cancer. Gary Bennett, PhD, of the Global Health Institute at Duke University in Durham, N.C., served as the senior author.

"This is shocking," said co-author Christopher Lathan, MD, MPH, an oncologist in the Dana-Farber division of population sciences. "There is only one recommendation to decrease the chance of getting lung cancer: Stop smoking and avoid tobacco smoke."

Photo By Sam Ogden

Dr. Lathan and colleagues surveyed 1,530 individuals who had participated in the National Cancer Institute's 2005 Health Information National Trends Survey. They uncovered several striking differences in the way blacks and whites view lung cancer (Cancer online, February 22, 2010).

When asked whether lung cancer is caused by lifestyle and behavior, 73% of blacks agreed compared with 85% of whites. When asked if they would be reluctant to be checked for lung cancer symptoms out of fear of receiving bad news, 22% of blacks said yes vs 9% of whites. Additionally, 51% of African Americans believed they would have symptoms before a diagnosis of lung cancer compared with 32% of whites.

While misperceptions may not be the only reason for differences in mortality between African Americans and whites, they could play a role, Dr. Lathan said. "We
really need to target lung cancer education to communities of color. And we need to deliver really clear messages: ‘Stop smoking if you want to prevent lung cancer.'"

The medical community must make it clear that lung cancer is deadly, "more deadly than breast, prostate, and colon cancer combined," a point that neither race adequately appreciates, he said. Many of those surveyed, regardless of race, said they believed 50% of lung cancer patients survive five years or longer with treatment. The true percentage is 15%.

 

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by jACKIE QUICK | November 22, 2010 3:08 PM EST

 If someone has been DX w/LC , it should be treated with the utmost respect .  Keep in mind that SCLC also has a miniority of never smokers and a widespread profle of long term, heavy smokers and short term light smokers.  Many of those diagnosed also contacted LC from an enviromental source.  Yet, so many of our communities continue to stereotype .  Sad Sad Sad

by Kevin Ferris | November 22, 2010 11:22 AM EST

Not to mention the necessity to clean up our collective air (indoor and out)!

by John Mygrant | November 22, 2010 11:01 AM EST

NSCLC is insidious---and ignored.  My wife (Caucasion, 56, NON-smoker) had no risk factors.  A back ache, worsening after PT, an X-ray with no abnormalities and finally an MRI that showed many small bone lesions.  CT scans found primary lung cancer, numerous liver tumors that grew even with treatment.  Those with NSCLC and no risk factors are most often doomed---little chance of discovery and once discovered, too late for much successful treatment.  My wife made 8 months survival and the end was most difficult when mets appeared in her brain taking speech, motor skills, cognition--everything (so hopefully it also took any knowledge of suffering).  All the right things to avoid lung cancer---yet there it was.  The sad truth is that smokers actually have a better chance of having either form of LC discovered because of their lifestyle choice (and often other medial symptoms that result in accidental discovery of LC).  But for non-smokers of any race...... JMygrant

by Ardith Dentzer | September 02, 2010 11:40 AM EDT

Dr. Lathan should have said, "Stop smoking if you want to prevent small cell lung cancer."Otherwise the misperception about the majority of lung cancer diagnoses (non small cell lung cancer) will persist. Lung cancer "gets no respect" given people believe we all did it to ourselves. That is true for small cell lung cancer patients, approximately 20 percent of new lung cancer diagnoses every year, but it is not true for the lion's share of yearly diagnoses, 80 percent as non-smal cell lung cancer patients. They did not smoke and weren't around smokers either. Lung cancer is the number 2 killer of Americans after heart disease. We must do more to educate Americans about lung cancer in general or we will never get the funding we need to find cures.






 
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