Publications by authors named "Fumiko Chino"

Recent advancements in the treatment of early-stage breast cancer have significantly shifted the radiotherapy landscape. Traditionally, the standard of care included lumpectomy followed by endocrine therapy and 3-5 weeks of adjuvant radiation targeting the entire unilateral breast. This review summaries modern trials, emphasizing data reported since 2019 that have changed radiation treatment paradigms.

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Importance: Asian American individuals are not underrepresented in medicine; however, aggregation in prior workforce analyses may mask underlying disparities.

Objective: To assess representation by Asian race and disaggregated subgroups in the US allopathic medical school workforce.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This cross-sectional study used Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) special reports, generated using the AAMC Applicant-Matriculant Data File, Student Records System, Graduate Medical Education Track Survey, and faculty roster.

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This study examined the association of county-level jail and state-level prison incarceration rates and cancer mortality rates in the United States. Incarceration rates (1995-2018) were sourced from national data and categorized into quartiles. County- and state-level mortality rates (2000-2019) with invasive cancer as the underlying cause of death were obtained from the National Vital Statistics System.

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Importance: Cancer is a leading cause of death among people experiencing homelessness (PEH) in the US. Acute care settings are important sources of care for PEH; however, the association of housing status with inpatient care remains understudied, particularly in the context of cancer.

Objective: To assess whether housing status is associated with differences in the inpatient care of hospitalized adults with cancer.

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Article Synopsis
  • Over 20 million individuals in the U.S. identified as Asian American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander in 2022, with varying immigration histories and health needs, yet cervical cancer studies have often lumped this diverse group together.
  • This study aimed to investigate cervical cancer disparities specifically within disaggregated Asian American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander groups by analyzing data from 122,926 cervical cancer patients diagnosed between 2004 and 2020.
  • Results showed that Asian American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander patients were diagnosed at earlier stages of cervical cancer compared to non-Hispanic White patients, with the largest subgroups being Filipino, Chinese, Indian/Pakistani, Vietnamese, and Korean Americans
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  • Researchers studied how much money cancer patients spend on cannabis during treatment.
  • They found that on average, patients spent around $80 a month on cannabis products.
  • It turns out that men and older patients were more likely to spend over $100 a month, and many patients stopped using cannabis because it was too expensive or not covered by insurance.
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Unlabelled: Secondary endpoints (SEP) provide crucial information in the interpretation of clinical trials, but their features are not yet well understood. Thus, we sought to empirically characterize the scope and publication rate of SEPs among late-phase oncology trials. We assessed SEPs for each randomized, published phase III oncology trial across all publications and ClinicalTrials.

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Article Synopsis
  • Family planning for female physicians is hindered by factors like high infertility risks, challenging workloads, inadequate family leave policies, and gender discrimination, leading to feelings of workplace un support.
  • A thematic analysis of open-ended survey comments from 162 physicians identified three key barriers: institutional (like the lack of parental leave), departmental (including discrimination and issues with childcare), and personal (such as challenges in family planning and reproductive health).
  • Recommendations to address these barriers include enhancing institutional support, expanding parental leave, and fostering cultural changes to better balance family and career for female physicians.
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Studies support the existence of psychosomatic phenomena that enable critically ill patients to postpone death until a specific event. We assessed for this effect in cancer by examining variability in deaths at the month and weekend levels using the National Center for Health Statistics database. We found that deaths from cancer were not uniformly distributed temporally.

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Cancer is a leading cause of death among children in the Philippines, a low-middle-income country of over 110 million people. In this Comment, we describe how financial toxicity affects families of pediatric patients with cancer in the Philippines. We explore direct costs of care, indirect costs such as transportation and lodging, and psychosocial sequelae, in the Filipino medical system and sociocultural contexts.

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Purpose: Palliative care plays essential roles in cancer care. However, differences in receipt among individuals identifying as Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Other Pacific Islanders (AA&NHPI) with cancer are not well-characterized, especially when these diverse groups are disaggregated. We characterized disparities in receipt of palliative care among AA&NHPI patients with AJCC Stage IV prostate, breast, or lung cancer.

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Introduction: Financial toxicity is common among patients with cancer, as are co-occurring health-related social risks (HRSRs). There is limited evidence to support best practices in screening for HRSRs and financial toxicity in the cancer context. This analysis sought to understand variations of identified needs based on treatment course using data from a large screening program.

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Purpose: The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) addresses food insecurity for low-income households, which is associated with access to care. Many US states expanded SNAP access through policies eliminating the asset test (ie, restrictions based on SNAP applicant assets) and/or broadening income eligibility. The objective of this study was to determine whether state SNAP policies were associated with the use of mammography among women eligible for breast cancer screening.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates gender representation in radiation oncology (RO), finding that only 30.5% of ARO faculty are women and highlighting significant gender disparities in disease site specialization.
  • Women are primarily concentrated in treating breast and gynecologic cancers, with over 40% representation, while specialties like genitourinary and thoracic cancers have less than 25% female faculty.
  • The findings suggest that women faculty are more likely to treat certain cancers compared to men, pointing to a need for further research on the reasons behind these gender-based specialization trends.
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Importance: Patients of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, New York, are now offered a choice of either in-person or remote telehealth visits for radiation oncology care. However, safety and satisfaction among patients receiving treatment with fully remote physician management is unclear.

Objective: To analyze patient safety and satisfaction, financial implications, and environmental consequences associated with fully remote management among a cohort of patients treated with radiotherapy.

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Importance: The five 1997 Office of Management and Budget races in the US include American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White, with Hispanic ethnicity. Despite the Affordable Care Act mandating Office of Management and Budget-based collecting and reporting standards, race and ethnicity publishing in medical journals is inconsistent, despite being necessary to achieve health equity.

Objective: To quantify race and ethnicity reporting rates and calculate representation quotients (RQs) in published oncology clinical trials.

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