AI Article Synopsis

  • Breast cancer mortality has reduced by 40% over the last 30 years, but disparities exist based on race, socioeconomic status, and rurality, highlighting the need for equitable access to screening mammography.
  • A study in Delaware revealed significant disparities in access to mammography, with fewer facilities in areas with higher populations of Black women and in rural counties.
  • Location-allocation analysis identified potential sites to establish new mammography facilities, emphasizing the importance of tailored screening guidelines for increasing access, especially in underserved communities.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite a 40% reduction in breast cancer mortality over the last 30 years, not all groups have benefited equally from these gains. A consistent link between later stage of diagnosis and disparities in breast cancer mortality has been observed by race, socioeconomic status, and rurality. Therefore, ensuring equitable geographic access to screening mammography represents an important priority for reducing breast cancer disparities. Access to breast cancer screening was evaluated in Delaware, a state that experiences an elevated burden from breast cancer but is otherwise representative of the US in terms of race and urban-rural characteristics. We first conducted a catchment analysis of mammography facilities. Finding evidence of disparities by race and rurality, we next conducted a location-allocation analysis to identify candidate locations for the establishment of new mammography facilities to optimize equitable access.

Methods: A catchment analysis using the ArcGIS Pro Service Area analytic tool characterized the geographic distribution of mammography sites and Breast Imaging Centers of Excellence (BICOEs). Poisson regression analyses identified census tract-level correlates of access. Next, the ArcGIS Pro Location-Allocation analytic tool identified candidate locations for the placement of additional mammography sites in Delaware according to several sets of breast cancer screening guidelines.

Results: The catchment analysis showed that for each standard deviation increase in the number of Black women in a census tract, there were 68% (95% CI 38-85%) fewer mammography units and 89% (95% CI 60-98%) fewer BICOEs. The more rural counties in the state accounted for 41% of the population but only 22% of the BICOEs. The results of the location-allocation analysis depended on which set of screening guidelines were adopted, which included increasing mammography sites in communities with a greater proportion of younger Black women and in rural areas.

Conclusions: The results of this study illustrate how catchment and location-allocation analytic tools can be leveraged to guide the equitable selection of new mammography facility locations as part of a larger strategy to close breast cancer disparities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10631173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13058-023-01738-wDOI Listing

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