Racial disparities in head, neck cancer more to do with society than biology
By ANIMonday, September 27, 2010
WASHINGTON - A new study has suggested that head and neck cancer outcomes associated with race may be more closely linked to social and behavioural factors than biological differences, especially for African Americans
Researchers at Henry Ford Hospital found that while those who self-reported to be African American are at greater risk for late stage cancer, there was no correlation between patients’ genetic ancestry and cancer stage or survival.
In fact, the study shows only five percent of patients who self-reported to be African American had more than 95 percent West African ancestry.
“We believe this is the first piece of evidence using genetic race to take a closer look at outcomes with respect to stage - early or late - and survival in patients with head and neck cancer,” said lead author Maria J. Worsham.
“We know that African Americans are disproportionately diagnosed with late-stage cancer and have worse outcomes than Caucasians. While there has been no real consensus on the causes for this difference, it is possible access to care, stage at diagnosis and insurance status may be factoring into the equation,” she said.
Since self-reported race doesn’t always offer a complete picture of a person’s biologic make-up, Worsham and her colleagues set out to compare patients’ self-reported race with their genetic ancestry to determine if there is any connection to head and neck cancer outcomes.
The study included 358 patients; 37 percent were African American.
The researchers examined diagnosis (late versus early stage) and overall survival for African Americans with HNSCC based on self-reported race and genetic West African ancestry.
During the past decade, many groups have developed and characterized sets of single nucleotide polymorphism markers that can distinguish genetic ancestry among major ethnic groups such as Asian and West African, called ancestry information makers (AIMs).
For the study, genetic ancestry was based on a panel of 100 AIMs to estimate genetic background.
“Using these genetic markers gives you additional statistical power. It’s no longer two just categories - Black or White; it becomes a continuous variable. Race is not equal to genetics. Genetic markers don’t define specific races,” said Worsham.
The study found no correlation between West African genetic ancestry and HNSCC outcomes. Only self-reported race was associated with head and neck cancer stage.
Only 5 percent of self-reported African Americans had more than 95 percent West African ancestry, with 27 percent having less than 60 percent West African ancestry. By comparison, 48 percent who self-reported as Caucasian had more than 95 percent European American ancestry.
The findings were presented at the American Academy of tolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation Annual Meeting in oston. (ANI)