Race Could Affect Outcomes in Head-and-Neck Cancers

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Key Takeaways

  • For patients with head-and-neck cancer, treatment outcomes may be influenced by race

  • Black patients in a clinical trial had higher death rates than white patients, and researchers say that suggests differences in how both respond to therapy

  • Differences in economic status and access to health care are other contributors

MONDAY, Dec. 19, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Black patients with head-and-neck cancers have twice the death rates of white patients, and a new study suggests race itself underlies those differences.

“What is unique about our study is it strongly supports the conclusion that Black patients seem to respond to therapy differently than white patients,” said study author Dr. Jeffrey Liu. He is an associate professor in the division of head and neck surgery at Fox Chase Cancer Center and the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, in Philadelphia.

Past research has found that factors such as economic status and access to health care also contribute to these issues.

For this study, the researchers used data from a clinical trial by the nonprofit Radiation Therapy Oncology Group. Patients in such a trial are by design similar for factors such as age, health status and cancer stage. Once enrolled, they also receive largely the same cancer care, which is not true in the general population where access and quality of care can vary.

For this study, 468 Black head-and-neck cancer patients were compared with white patients who received the same treatment.

While researchers expected similar outcomes for both groups, in 60% of the matched pairs, white patients had better survival than Black patients, the study found.

“Using self-reported race, we see a difference in how these groups respond to the same treatment,” Liu said in a cancer center news release.

Race is a social construct rather than biological, he noted, so it can be imperfect for grouping patients, but will continue to be used until precision medicine advances to the point where it will be possible to use a patient’s genetic profile in research.

“The bottom line is that people are different," Liu said. "When you put together groups of patients, however imperfect the grouping, some people may be less responsive to therapy than others. Our next steps are to try to understand why this is the case."

The study findings were published Dec. 7 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more on head-and-neck cancers.

SOURCE: Fox Chase Cancer Center, news release, Dec. 7, 2022

What This Means For You

If you have head-and-neck cancer, you may respond differently to treatment than patients of other races, but medical experts don't understand exactly why yet.

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