U.S. breast cancer deaths
drop; rate among white women falls most
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[October 14, 2016]
By David Beasley
(Reuters) - U.S. death rates from breast
cancer have dropped, although the decline was still greater among white
women than black women, according to a study released Thursday.
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From 2010 to 2014, there were approximately 41,000 deaths each year
from breast cancer, the second-most deadly cancer for women after
lung cancer, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
said.
While total death rates dropped during the five-year period, the
decline was greater for white women at 1.9 percent per year compared
with 1.5 percent per year for black women, the study found. Black
women died at a rate of 29.2 deaths per 100,000 people compared to
20.6 deaths per 100,000 for white women, the CDC said.
However, there were indications that disparity could be diminishing,
particularly among women under 50 for whom the decline in death
rates was the same among white and black patients, said Lisa
Richardson, director of CDC's Division of Cancer and one of the
authors of the study.
That could be because younger women are now getting earlier and
better treatment for breast cancer, Richardson said in a telephone
interview.
"Younger black women tend to have more aggressive cancer and if you
don't get the therapy right, it is difficult to make up the
difference later," Richardson said. "We're hopeful the lack of
difference in death rates between black and white women under 50
will start to be seen in older women."
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A healthy diet, exercise and maintaining a normal weight are among
factors that can help prevent breast cancer, Richardson said.
(Reporting by David Beasley in Atlanta; Editing by Michele Gershberg
and Cynthia Osterman)
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