Breast Cancer Incidence Rates in Ghanaian and US Black Women From 2013 Through 2015
Brittny C. Davis Lynn, Jonine D. Figueroa, Dennis Laryea, Fred Kwame Awittor, Naomi O. Ohene Oti, Quiera S. Booker, Lawrence Edusei, Nicolas Titiloye, Ernest Adjei, Beatrice Wiafe Addai, Robertson Adjei, Lucy T. Afriyie, Joel Yarney, Daniel Ansong, Seth Wiafe, Thomas Ahearn

TL;DR
The study found similar rates of ER-negative breast cancer in Ghanaian and US Black women, suggesting shared risk factors that need further investigation.
Contribution
The study provides population-based evidence comparing ER-negative breast cancer incidence rates in Ghanaian and US non-Hispanic Black women.
Findings
Age-standardized ER-negative breast cancer rates were similar in Ghanaian and US non-Hispanic Black women.
ER-positive breast cancer rates were lower in Ghanaian women compared to US non-Hispanic Black women.
ER-negative rates were higher in both Ghanaian and US non-Hispanic Black women than in US non-Hispanic White women.
Abstract
Do age-standardized incidence rates of estrogen receptor (ER)-negative and ER-positive breast tumors in Ghana support a possible increased susceptibility to ER-negative breast cancer in women of West African ancestry? This cross-sectional study including 1071 women in Ghana and 121 548 women in the US with breast cancer from 2013 through 2015 found that age-standardized incidence rates of ER-negative tumors were similar for Ghanaian and US non-Hispanic Black women. ER-positive tumors were lower for women from Ghana compared with non-Hispanic Black women. Findings from this study of the similarity between Ghanaian and US non-Hispanic Black women for age-standardized incidence rates of ER-negative but not ER-positive breast tumors suggest that there may be shared etiologic factors associated with ER-negative breast cancer that need identification. This cross-sectional study…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · BRCA gene mutations in cancer · Breast Cancer Treatment Studies
