The Effect of Race and Area Deprivation on Symptom Profiles over the Course of Early-Stage Breast Cancer

Author:

Abujaradeh Hiba1,O'Brien Julia1,Mazanec Susan R.2,Bender Catherine M.1,Schlemmer Isabelle M.1,Brufsky Adam M.3,Nasrollahi Elham3,Rosenzweig Margaret1

Affiliation:

1. University of Pittsburgh

2. Case Western Reserve University

3. UPMC Hillman Cancer Center

Abstract

Abstract ABSTRACT Purpose: This study compared common symptoms (fatigue, pain), overall physical functioning and changes over time between Black and White women receiving early-stage breast cancer (ESBC) chemotherapy. Methods: A longitudinal, repeated measures comparative design was employed. Time points of symptom measurement (PROMIS domains) at baseline, mid and end point were adjusted as per patient chemotherapy schedule. Analyses: Linear mixed models were applied. Results: There were 147 patients, 36% Black 64% White (54±12 years) recommended to receive early-stage breast cancer chemotherapy with adequate data for symptom analysis. Pain: Main effect of race was significant (F(1, 390) = 29.43, p<.001) for pain with Black patients experiencing significantly higher pain scores compared to White patients at pretherapy (Mean Difference; MD=3.7, p=.034), midpoint (MD=5.8, p=.002), and endpoint (MD=7.8, p<.001). Fatigue: Fatigue significantly increased (deteriorated) at endpoint (MDT1-T3= 8.7, p<.001) for Black patients. Among White patients, fatigue significantly increased at midpoint (MDT1-T2= 5.7) and at endpoint (MDT1-T3=10.1, p<.001; MDT2-T3=4.3, p= .017). Physical function: Black patients had significantly lower physical function scores compared to White patients at midpoint (MD=4.0, p=.027). Physical function decreased by endpoint in Black (MDT1-T3=7.8, p<.001), and White patients (MDT1-T3=7.7, p<.001). Conclusion: Symptom burden significantly increased over the course of chemotherapy for all patients. Scores for pain and physical function were higher overall for Black patients and deteriorated at a greater rate for Black vs. White women over the course of chemotherapy. This assessment holds implication for proactive assessment and mitigation strategies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference45 articles.

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2. Giaquinto, A.N., et al., Breast Cancer Statistics, 2022. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022. 72(6): p. 524–541.

3. Trends in breast cancer mortality by race/ethnicity, age, and US census region, United States1999-2020;Ellington TD;Cancer,2023

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