African American vs Caucasian race/ethnicity in adrenocortical carcinoma patients

  • Andrea Panunzio
  • Stefano Tappero
  • Lukas Hohenhorst
  • Cristina Cano Garcia
  • Mattia Piccinelli
  • Francesco Barletta
  • Zhe Tian
  • Alessandro Tafuri
  • Alberto Briganti
  • Ottavio De Cobelli
  • Felix K H Chun
  • Derya Tilki
  • Carlo Terrone
  • Fred Saad
  • Shahrokh F Shariat
  • Isabelle Bourdeau
  • Maria Angela Cerruto
  • Alessandro Antonelli
  • Pierre I Karakiewicz

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

In some primaries, African American race/ethnicity predisposes to higher stage and worse survival. We tested for differences in cancer-specific mortality (CSM) and other-cause mortality (OCM) in patients with adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) according to African American vs Caucasian race/ethnicity. We hypothesized that African Americans present with higher tumor stage and grade, do not receive the same treatment, and experience worse oncological outcomes than Caucasians. Within Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database, we identified 1016 ACC patients: 123 (12.1%) African Americans vs 893 (87.9%) Caucasians. Propensity score matching (PSM) (age, sex, marital status, grade, T, N, and M stages, and treatment type), Poisson-smoothed cumulative incidence plots, and competing risk regression (CRR) were used. Compared to Caucasians, African Americans were more frequently unmarried (56.9% vs 35.5%, P < 0.001). No clinically meaningful or statistically significant differences were observed for age, grade, T, N, and M stages, as well as treatment type (all P > 0.05). After PSM (1:4), 123 African Americans and 492 Caucasians remained and were included in CRR analysis. In multivariable CRR models, CSM and OCM rates were not different between the two race/ethnicities (hazard ratio: 0.84, P = 0.3). In African Americans, 5-year CSM rates were 31.2% and 75.3% in European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors (ENSAT) stages I-II and III-IV, respectively vs 32.9% and 75.4% in Caucasians. Overall 5-year OCM rates were 11.0% vs 10.1% in respectively African Americans and Caucasians. Unlike other primaries, in ACC, African American race/ethnicity is not associated with higher disease stage at initial diagnosis or worse survival.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummere220249
ISSN1351-0088
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.07.2023
PubMed 37043366