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Worse Clinical and Survival Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Living in Puerto Rico Compared to Hispanics, Non-Hispanic Blacks, and Non-Hispanic Whites from Florida.

Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities 2026 Vol.13(1) p. 130-140

Lantz AE, Gebert R, Li J, Oliveras JA, Gordián ER, Perez-Morales J, Eschrich S, Chen DT, Rosa M, Dutil J, Saavedra HI, Muñoz-Antonia T, Flores I, Cress WD

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[BACKGROUND] Herein, we report the characterization of four cohorts of breast cancer patients including (1) non-Hispanic Whites in Florida, (2) non-Hispanic Blacks in Florida, (3) Hispanics in Florida

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  • 표본수 (n) 9361

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Lantz AE, Gebert R, et al. (2026). Worse Clinical and Survival Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Living in Puerto Rico Compared to Hispanics, Non-Hispanic Blacks, and Non-Hispanic Whites from Florida.. Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities, 13(1), 130-140. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-024-02232-5
MLA Lantz AE, et al.. "Worse Clinical and Survival Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Living in Puerto Rico Compared to Hispanics, Non-Hispanic Blacks, and Non-Hispanic Whites from Florida.." Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities, vol. 13, no. 1, 2026, pp. 130-140.
PMID 39543072

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Herein, we report the characterization of four cohorts of breast cancer patients including (1) non-Hispanic Whites in Florida, (2) non-Hispanic Blacks in Florida, (3) Hispanics in Florida, and (4) Hispanics in Puerto Rico.

[METHODS] Data from female breast cancer patients were collected from cancer registry (n = 9361) and self-reported patient questionnaires (n = 4324). Several statistical tests were applied to identify significant group differences.

[RESULTS] Breast cancer patients from Puerto Rico were least frequently employed and had the lowest rates of college education among the groups. They also reported more live births and less breastfeeding. Both Hispanic groups reported a higher fraction experiencing menstruation at age 11 or younger (Floridian Hispanics [38%] and Puerto Ricans [36%]) compared to non-Hispanic Whites (20%) and non-Hispanic Blacks (22%). Non-Hispanic Black and Puerto Rican women were significantly older at breast cancer diagnosis than their non-Hispanic White and Floridian Hispanic counterparts. The Puerto Rican and non-Hispanic Black groups more frequently had pathology stage T2 or higher primary breast tumors at diagnosis (non-Hispanic Whites [29%], non-Hispanic Blacks [39%], Floridian Hispanics [33%], Puerto Ricans [46%]). The Puerto Rican (73%, 95% CI [66, 82]) and non-Hispanic Black (79%, 95% CI [75, 84]) groups demonstrate reduced 5-year survival compared to non-Hispanic Whites (89%, 95% CI [86, 92]) and Floridian Hispanics (89%, 95% CI [86, 90]).

[CONCLUSIONS] These findings demonstrate that Puerto Rican breast cancer patients suffer significant breast cancer health disparities relative to non-Hispanic Whites and Hispanics from Florida similar to the disparities observed for non-Hispanic Blacks. Future work must seek to better understand and address these disparities.

MeSH Terms

Adult; Aged; Female; Humans; Middle Aged; Black or African American; Breast Neoplasms; Florida; Health Status Disparities; Hispanic or Latino; Puerto Rico; Registries; White