Assessing racial, ethnic, and nativity disparities in US cancer mortality using a new integrated platform

Author:

Yu Mandi1ORCID,Liu Lihua23ORCID,Gibson James (Todd)4,Campbell Dave4,Liu Qinran5,Scoppa Steve4,Feuer Eric J1ORCID,Pinheiro Paulo S5

Affiliation:

1. Surveillance Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences , Bethesda, MD, USA

2. Los Angeles Cancer Surveillance Program, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, CA, USA

3. Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, CA, USA

4. Information Management Services, Inc , Calverton, MD, USA

5. University of Miami Miller School of Medicine , Miami, FL, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Foreign-born populations in the United States have markedly increased, yet cancer trends remain unexplored. Survey-based Population-Adjusted Rate Calculator (SPARC) is a new tool for evaluating nativity differences in cancer mortality. Methods Using SPARC, we calculated 3-year (2016-2018) age-adjusted mortality rates and rate ratios for common cancers by sex, age group, race and ethnicity, and nativity. Trends by nativity were examined for the first time for 2006-2018. Traditional cancer statistics draw populations from decennial censuses. However, nativity-stratified populations are from the American Community Surveys, thus involve sampling errors. To rectify this, SPARC employed bias-corrected estimators. Death counts came from the National Vital Statistics System. Results Age-adjusted mortality rates were higher among US-born populations across nearly all cancer types, with the largest US-born, foreign-born difference observed in lung cancer among Black women (rate ratio = 3.67, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.37 to 4.00). The well-documented White–Black differences in breast cancer mortality existed mainly among US-born women. For all cancers combined, descending trends were more accelerated for US-born compared with foreign-born individuals in all race and ethnicity groups with changes ranging from –2.6% per year in US-born Black men to stable (statistically nonsignificant) among foreign-born Black women. Pancreas and liver cancers were exceptions with increasing, stable, or decreasing trends depending on nativity and race and ethnicity. Notably, foreign-born Black men and foreign-born Hispanic men did not show a favorable decline in colorectal cancer mortality. Conclusions Although all groups show beneficial cancer mortality trends, those with higher rates in 2006 have experienced sharper declines. Persistent disparities between US-born and foreign-born individuals, especially among Black people, necessitate further investigation.

Funder

Surveillance Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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