Breast Cancer Rates
Differ Within Different Asian American Communities
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
The incidence of cancer among Asian Americans in
However, Asian American women remain more likely to die of cancer than of any other cause. And, while they are less likely than women in any other major ethnic group to develop breast cancer, their breast cancer rate is the nation's fastest-growing.
The findings come from a new analysis by the Cancer
Surveillance Section of the California Department of Health Services.
"We're encouraged by these data, but we hope that this report
will serve as a clarion to urge Asian American women, who are the least likely
to seek cancer screening such as mammograms, to look out for their health,"
said Moon S. Chen, Jr., professor of public health sciences at UC Davis School
of Medicine and
While cancer incidence and mortality fell for Asian Americans as a whole, the good news wasn't shared equally across Asian American communities. Korean Americans saw only a 0.2 percent drop in their cancer incidence during the study period, the lowest for any of the five Asian subgroups studied—Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese. And Filipino Americans, alone among the Asian American subgroups, saw a 2.5-percent increase in their death rate from cancer.
"These findings underscore the tremendous heterogeneity among
Asian Americans, and the importance of looking at each Asian ethnic group
separately," said Chen, who also serves as a Bush appointee to the President's
Cancer Advisory Board. "
According to Chen, the increase in breast cancer seen in Asian
American women may be due to increased awareness of breast cancer among Asian
women and their physicians, as well as to Westernization, which Chen defines as
"behaviors that are still difficult to quantify but represent qualitatively
different actions than those in traditional
AANCART is the largest project ever undertaken to reduce
cancer in Asian Americans. Headquartered at UC Davis, it includes researchers
from seven other institutions: Harvard,
The 5th
SOURCES:
5th