Purpose: African-Americans have a higher age-adjusted incidence and a higher disease-specific mortality than whites. Two potential causes are differences in biology or socioeconomic status, the latter leading to differences in access, delivery, or utilization of health care. In this study, we compare serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels for comparable stage and grade-disease, as well as individual insurance status. PSA is a demonstrated indicator of the size and virulence of tumor and is correlated with prognosis. Insurance status has been linked with income and education and is an indicator of access to medical care.

Patients And Methods: All patients were referred to the University of Chicago Center for Radiation Therapy (UCCRT) with stages A-C (T1-4) prostate cancer. They were seen in four different facilities, designated A through D, and were evaluated and staged by the faculty of UCCRT using the same criteria. Hospitals A and B are large teaching hospitals located within the city of Chicago; C and D are suburban and urban community hospitals, respectively. A total of 341 patients seen between May 1987 to November 1992 are included in this study.

Results: In univariate analysis, PSA levels were significantly associated with stage, grade, and race. Higher mean PSA levels were seen with increasing clinical stage and grade. African-Americans had higher mean values than whites. Private insurance and managed care patients had lower values than Medicare-only patients. Within each race, the above results were reproduced, except for insurance status, which was significant only in African-Americans. In multivariate analysis, stage, grade, and insurance status were significant in African-Americans, whereas only stage and grade were significant in whites. Within comparable insurance status, stage, and grade, no racial differences were found, except among Medicare-only patients, with African-Americans who had stage B or grade 2 disease having higher mean PSA levels than whites. Racial differences were seen at hospital B, but not at hospital A. No racial comparisons could be made at hospitals C or D due to an insufficient number of African-American patients. At hospital A, whites and African-Americans had comparable private plus HMO insurance distributions (81.1% and 86.9%, respectively); at hospital B, the distribution was quite different--only 4.4% of whites had Medicare-only insurance while 31.8% African-Americans had no supplementary insurance. For all patients in the multivariate analysis, racial difference was seen only among Medicare-only patients.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that socioeconomic differences are responsible for the racial differences noted in prostate cancer. Our findings of higher PSA levels in African-American Medicare-only patients may result from the many African-Americans disproportionately uninsured throughout their lives compared with whites and thus using services at later stages of disease. A second possible explanation is cultural or ethnic differences in care-seeking behavior, with poorer African-Americans less likely to pursue care for disease until it has progressed. Our findings can explain the dichotomy of poorer overall outcome among African-Americans with prostate cancer, but comparable stage-adjusted outcome with comparable treatments between African-Americans and whites.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

insurance status
24
stage grade
24
psa levels
20
african-americans
12
prostate cancer
12
higher psa
12
medicare-only patients
12
racial differences
12
insurance
10
prostate-specific antigen
8

Similar Publications

Background:  Craniofacial mucormycosis is a highly lethal infectious disease. This study aims to assess and analyze multiple variables, including clinical, socioeconomic, and biochemical markers, to identify and examine risk factors for mortality associated with this mycotic infection.

Material And Methods:  A retrospective analysis was conducted on 38 patients who sought medical attention at the Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery Division of a tertiary-level hospital in Monterrey, Mexico.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of unified pooling arrangement on health inequity in China: a DID-RIF approach.

BMC Health Serv Res

January 2025

School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Beihang University, No. 37 Xueyuan Road, Beijing, 100191, China.

Background: To address the health inequity caused by decentralized management, China has introduced a provincial pooling system for urban employees' basic medical insurance. This paper proposes a research framework to evaluate similar policies in different contexts. This paper adopts a mixed-methods approach to more comprehensively and precisely capture the causal effects of the policy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Evidence examining disparities in post-acute care (PAC) utilization among various racial and ethnic groups after stroke and the influence of social determinants of health (SDOH) in these decisions is lacking. Thus, we searched the literature from January 2000 to November 2023 regarding PAC among individuals after stroke through: 1) Pubmed, 2) Scopus, 3) Web of Science, 4) Embase, and 5) CINAHL. We found 14 studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: According to the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, pregnant people facing periviable delivery should be counseled on expected neonatal outcomes and available pregnancy options. The objective of this study is to evaluate if rates of neonatology consultation and pregnancy option counseling for those facing periviable delivery differ based on social vulnerability factors or Social Vulnerability Index (SVI). : This was a retrospective cohort study of patients who delivered at 22 0/7 weeks to 25 6/7 weeks of gestation at two academic medical centers with level III or IV neonatal intensive care units from 2019 to 2022.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: Predictors of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients have been extensively studied. However, comparative analyses of predictors for hospitalization versus discharge from the emergency department remain limited. : This retrospective study evaluated predictors of hospitalization among adults (≥18 years) presenting to the emergency department with COVID-19 infection between 1 March 2020 and 15 June 2020.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!