NCI Studies Examine Racial Disparity in Survival Among Patients With Endometrial Cancer
Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, report findings that suggest a biological
disparity for endometrial cancer exists between Caucasians and African Americans. The research was done in conjunction with Walter Reed Army
Medical Center and other institutions. Two separate studies, one examining patient outcomes in four endometrial cancer clinical
trials1, and the other looking at gene expression patterns in endometrial tumors2, provide evidence that biological
factors can contribute to the significant racial disparity in survival rates for this cancer. Both studies will be presented at the Society of
Gynecologic Oncologists (SGO) 2005 Annual Meeting on Women's Cancer, March 19-23, 2005, in Miami, Fla., and will be published later this
year.
It is estimated that in 2005 there will be approximately 40,000 new cases of cancer of the endometrium, or lining of the uterus, and about
7,000 endometrial cancer-related deaths. While the rate for new cancers in African-American women is lower than for Caucasians,
African-American women have a greater mortality rate from endometrial cancer than Caucasians; an NCI 1989-1994 review reported that 5-year
survival for endometrial cancer was 86 percent in Caucasians but only 54 percent in African Americans.
"The etiology underlying this disparity is multi-fold," said LTC Larry Maxwell, M.D., of Walter Reed's Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology and NCI, an author of both studies. "It can include cultural differences in dealing with medical illness and unequal access to the
proper care and therapy, but could also arise from a difference in biology which may result in more aggressive tumors in some populations."
Maxwell and his group sought to uncover the role of biology by examining survival outcome in a setting that should provide equal treatment
to all patients: a clinical trial. The researchers studied data from four trials performed by the Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG), an
NCI-funded cooperative group that coordinates most of the large therapeutic gynecologic cancer studies in the United States. The survival
rates for 168 African-American patients and 997 Caucasian patients with Stage III, Stage IV or recurrent endometrial cancer were compared. The
analysis showed that African-American women with endometrial cancer have a 25 percent greater chance of dying than Caucasian women with the
same diagnosis, and the overall median survival for African-American patients was 10.6 months compared to 12.2 months for Caucasians.
In the second study, the investigators evaluated global gene expression among endometrial cancer patients to determine any specific
differences that may account for a biological disparity. Tumors from 18 African-American patients and 27 Caucasian patients were matched and
compared according to stage, tumor grade, and cell type. In the initial analysis, Maxwell and his group could not identify expression profiles
unique to each race. However, when they excluded early-stage cancers and focused only on advanced stage cancers, they observed expression
profiles that did cluster according to race; 325 total transcripts had different expression levels in African Americans and Caucasians.
"Both of these studies suggest that underlying molecular differences may partially explain the disparity in survival outcome for endometrial
cancer for these two groups," said Maxwell. He added that the studies do not imply that African Americans and Caucasians are genetically
different, but rather that multiple factors including environment and culture may result in a difference in gene expression. "Further research
is needed to determine how these differences can be used to help identify better therapies for high-risk minority groups."
"Though this study looks at one particular cancer in terms of racial disparities, we hope that it may shed light on our broader work in this
area," said Harold Freeman, M.D., director of the NCI Center to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities.
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1 "Racial disparity among patients with advanced/recurrent endometrial adenocarcinomas: a Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) study."
G. Larry Maxwell, Chunquio Tian, John I. Risinger, Carol Brown, Wendy Brewster.
2 "Racial disparity in global gene expression among patients with advanced endometrial adenocarcinoma." G. Larry Maxwell, G.V.R.
Chandramouli, Lou Dainty, Tracy Litzi, Michael A. Bidus, Andrew Berchuck, Carl J. Barrett, John I. Risinger.
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For more information about cancer, visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov or call NCI's Cancer
Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
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