Optimal Treatment Boosts Blacks' Lung Cancer Survival

ByABC News
January 19, 2009, 9:51 PM

Jan. 20 -- MONDAY, Jan. 19 (HealthDay News) -- Survival disparities between white and black patients with early-stage lung cancer disappear when black patients receive optimal therapy, according to a U.S. study that included nearly 18,000 patients.

Surgery to remove a portion of the lung (pulmonary resection) provides the best chance of a cure for patients with early-stage lung cancer.

"Black patients with early-stage lung cancer have lower five-year survival rates than white patients, and this difference in outcome has been attributed to lower rates of resection among black patients," wrote Dr. Farhood Farjah, of the University of Washington, Seattle, and colleagues. "Several potential factors underlying racial differences in the receipt of surgical therapy include differences in pulmonary function, access to care, refusal of surgery, beliefs about tumor spread on air exposure at the time of operation and the possibility of cure without surgery, distrust of the health care system and physicians, suboptimal patterns of patient and physician communication and health care system and provider biases."

Access to care is often considered the most important of the factors that affect racial disparities among lung cancer patients.

The study looked at nearly 18,000 patients (89 percent white and 6 percent black) who were diagnosed with lung cancer between 1992 and 2002 and recommended for pulmonary resection.

The researchers found that 69 percent of black patients had surgery, compared with 83 percent of white patients. Five-year survival rates were similar among both black and white patients who had surgery.

"Although these findings do not refute the likely roles of health care system and provider biases and patient characteristics as important causal factors underlying health disparities, the findings do suggest that other factors (i.e., distrust, perceptions and beliefs about lung cancer and its treatment and limited access to subspecialty care) may have a more dominant role in causing disparities than previously recognized," the study authors wrote.