CHICAGO – Black men with advanced prostate cancer have survival with chemotherapy that rivals or surpasses that of white men with advanced disease, and black men with castration-resistant prostate cancer have better outcomes with abiraterone than white men.
Those conclusions come from two studies presented here at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Taken together, they suggest that although there may be genetic or biologic differences in cancer presentation among different racial groups, receiving the appropriate care can level out those differences.
In the first study, Susan Halabi, PhD, from Duke University in Durham, N.C., and colleagues pooled data from nine randomized phase 3 chemotherapy trials in men with advanced prostate cancer and found that black and white men had the same median survival, 21 months, but black men had an adjusted hazard ratio [HR} for death of 0.81, compared with white men.
For the subpopulation of African Americans who were enrolled in trials funded by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the HR for death was 0.76 (P less than .0001).