Racial disparities in prostate cancer in the UK and the USA: Similarities, differences and steps forwards Review


Authors: Dee, E. C.; Todd, R.; Ng, K.; Aidoo-Micah, G.; Amen, T. B.; Moon, Z.; Vince, R. Jr; Muralidhar, V.; Mutsvangwa, K.; Funston, G.; Mounce, L. T. A.; Pintus, E.; Yamoah, K.; Spratt, D. E.; Mahal, B. A.; Shamash, J.; Horne, R.; Nguyen, P. L.
Review Title: Racial disparities in prostate cancer in the UK and the USA: Similarities, differences and steps forwards
Abstract: In the USA, Black men are approximately twice as likely to be diagnosed with and to die of prostate cancer than white men. In the UK, despite Black men having vastly different ancestral contexts and health-care systems from Black men in the USA, the lifetime risk of being diagnosed with prostate cancer is two-to-three times higher among Black British men than among white British men and Black British men are twice as likely to die of prostate cancer as white British men. Examination of racial disparities in prostate cancer in the USA and UK highlights systemic, socio-economic and sociocultural factors that might contribute to these differences. Variation by ancestry could affect incidence and tumour genomics. Disparities in incidence might also be affected by screening guidelines and access to and uptake of screening. Disparities in treatment access, continuity of care and outcomes could contribute to survival differences. In both localized and metastatic settings, equal access could diminish the observed disparities in both the USA and the UK. An understanding of behavioural medicine, especially an appreciation of cultural beliefs about illness and treatment, could inform and improve the ways in which health systems can engage with and deliver care to patients in minoritized groups affected by prostate cancer. Methods of promoting equity include targeting systemic barriers including systemic racism, proportional recruitment of patients into clinical trials, diversifying the health-care workforce and facilitating care informed by cultural humility. Actively engaging patients and communities in research and intervention might enable the translation of research into increasingly equitable care for patients with prostate cancer in the UK, the USA and globally. © Springer Nature Limited 2024.
Keywords: middle aged; review; united states; metastasis; incidence; practice guideline; prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms; patient care; prostate tumor; diagnosis; health care system; clinical practice guideline; epidemiology; racial disparity; health status disparities; united kingdom; therapy; african american; health disparity; caucasian; health care disparity; ethnology; healthcare disparities; white; humans; human; male; health workforce; oncogenomics; structural racism; black or african american; white people; access to treatment
Journal Title: Nature Reviews Urology
Volume: 22
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1759-4812
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2025-04-01
Start Page: 223
End Page: 234
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41585-024-00948-x
PUBMED: 39424981
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- MSK corresponding author is Edward Dee -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Edward Christopher Dee
    253 Dee