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Gastric cancer survival amongst Hispanics- A Hispanic paradox? A case series study using the SEER 1973--2005 data registry
by Ohaji, Ikechi U., M.P.H., The University of Texas School of Public Health, 2009, 54 pages; AAT 1459862

Abstract (Summary)

Stomach cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the world, and ranked 16th in the US in 2008. The age-adjusted rates among Hispanics were 2.8 times that of non-Hispanic Whites in 1998-2002. In spite of that, previous research has found that Hispanics with non-cardia adenocarcinoma of the stomach have a slightly better survival than non-Hispanic Whites. However, such previous research did not include a comparison with African-Americans, and it was limited to data released for the years 1973-2000 in the nine original Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Cancer Registries. This finding was interpreted as related to the Hispanic Paradox, a phenomenon that refers to the fact that Hispanics in the USA tend to paradoxically have substantially better health than other ethnic groups in spite of what their aggregate socio-economic indicators would predict. We extended such research to the SEER 17 Registry, 1973-2005, with varying years of diagnosis per registry, and compared the survival of non-cardia adenocarcinoma of the stomach according to ethnicity (Hispanics, non-Hispanic Whites and African-Americans), while controlling for age, gender, marital status, stage of disease and treatment using Cox regression survival analysis. We found that Hispanic ethnicity by itself did not confer an advantage on survival from non-cardia adenocarcinoma of the stomach, but that being born abroad was independently associated with the apparent 'Hispanic Paradox' previously reported, and that such advantage was seen among foreign born persons across all race/ethnic groups.

Indexing (document details)

Advisor:Cardenas, Victor M.
Committee members:Douglas, Tommy C.,  Pedroza, Claudia
School:The University of Texas School of Public Health
Department:Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
School Location:United States -- Texas
Source:MAI 47/03, Jun 2009
Source type:Dissertation
Subjects:Biostatistics, Public health
Publication Number: AAT 1459862
ISBN:9780549900849
Document URL:http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=1622202001&Fmt=7&clientI d=79356&RQT=309&VName=PQD
ProQuest document ID:1622202001


 

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