Background. Breast cancer survival has improved significantly in the US in the past 10–15 years. However, disparities exist in breast cancer survival between black and white women. Purpose. To investigate the effect of county healthcare resources and SES as well as individual SES status on breast cancer survival disparities between black and white women. Methods. Data from 1,796 breast cancer cases were obtained from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results and the National Longitudinal Mortality Study dataset. Cox Proportional Hazards models were constructed accounting for clustering within counties. Three sequential Cox models were fit for each outcome including demographic variables; demographic and clinical variables; and finally demographic, clinical, and county-level variables. Results. In unadjusted analysis, black women had a 53% higher likelihood of dying of breast cancer and 32% higher likelihood of dying of any cause ( ) compared with white women. Adjusting for demographic variables explained away the effect of race on breast cancer survival (HR, 1.40; 95% CI, 0.99–1.97), but not on all-cause mortality. The racial difference in all-cause survival disappeared only after adjusting for county-level variables (HR, 1.27; CI, 0.95–1.71). Conclusions. Improving equitable access to healthcare for all women in the US may help eliminate survival disparities between racial and socioeconomic groups. 1. Introduction Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined steadily in the US for the past 10–15 years [1–7]. The relative 5-year survival rate for breast cancer overall has also increased in the past decade to 89% [8]. Unfortunately, disparities exist in breast cancer outcomes between racial groups in the US. Although survival has increased for both white and black women over time, the survival increase in black women has been smaller [2]. Five-year relative survival for breast cancer was 90% for white women and 77% for black women between 2001 and 2007 [8, 9]. Several reasons have been suggested for the survival disparity between black and white women, including racial differences in access to and utilization of screening and treatment [10–12], risk factors that are differentially distributed by race [10, 13–15] and socioeconomic status (SES) [14, 16–20], and biological differences such as tumor aggressiveness [21, 22]. The results of research studies assessing the role of SES in racial disparities in breast cancer survival are mixed; some studies reported that racial differences in survival disappear after adjusting for SES [17, 19, 20,
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