Identifying Asian American lung cancer disparities: A novel analytic approach
Yunna Gu, Les R. Becker, Puja G. Khaitan, John F. Lazar

TL;DR
This study explores lung cancer disparities among Asian American subgroups using a new analytical method, revealing differences in diagnosis stages and survival rates compared to other racial groups.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analytic approach to examine lung cancer disparities within Asian American subpopulations.
Findings
Asian Americans were underrepresented in most clinical stages of lung cancer compared to White non-Hispanics.
Southeast Asians were overrepresented in stage IV lung cancer compared to other Asian subgroups.
Asian American subgroups showed higher survival rates than White non-Hispanics, Blacks, and Hispanics in some stages.
Abstract
Asian Americans include heterogeneous subpopulations with unique burden as the only racial group with cancer as the leading cause of death. The purpose of the study was to identify differences in clinical stage and survival of patients with lung cancer between Asian Americans and its subgroups relative to other racial groups. Patients with lung cancer from 2016 National Cancer Database were divided into East Asian, Southeast Asian, South Asian subgroups based on geographic origins, and a composite Asian American group with White non-Hispanic, Black, and Hispanic comparison groups. Columnar z score analysis with adjusted residuals was employed and the terms underrepresented and overrepresented were utilized to describe significant statistical findings. A total of 825,448 patients were analyzed. Asian Americans were underrepresented relative to White non-Hispanics in all clinical stages…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Cancer Risks and Factors
