TY - JOUR
T1 - Reducing racial and ethnic disparities in cardiovascular outcomes among cancer survivors
AU - Tan, Min Choon
AU - Stabellini, Nickolas
AU - Tan, Jia Yi
AU - Thong, Jia Yean
AU - Hedrick, Catherine
AU - Moore, Justin Xavier
AU - Cullen, Jennifer
AU - Hines, Anika
AU - Sutton, Arnethea
AU - Sheppard, Vanessa
AU - Agarwal, Neeraj
AU - Guha, Avirup
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - Purpose of review: Analyze current evidence on racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovascular outcomes among cancer survivors, identifying factors and proposing measures to address health inequities. Recent findings: Existing literature indicates that the Black population experiences worse cardiovascular outcomes following the diagnosis of both initial primary cancer and second primary cancer, with a notably higher prevalence of cardio-toxic events, particularly among breast cancer survivors. Contributing socioeconomic factors to these disparities include unfavorable social determinants of health, inadequate insurance coverage, and structural racism within the healthcare system. Additionally, proinflammatory epigenetic modification is hypothesized to be a contributing genetic variation factor. Addressing these disparities requires a multiperspective approach, encompassing efforts to address racial disparities and social determinants of health within the healthcare system, refine healthcare policies and access, and integrate historically stigmatized racial groups into clinical research. Summary: Racial and ethnic disparities persist in cardiovascular outcomes among cancer survivors, driven by multifactorial causes, predominantly associated with social determinants of health. Addressing these healthcare inequities is imperative, and timely efforts must be implemented to narrow the existing gap effectively.
AB - Purpose of review: Analyze current evidence on racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovascular outcomes among cancer survivors, identifying factors and proposing measures to address health inequities. Recent findings: Existing literature indicates that the Black population experiences worse cardiovascular outcomes following the diagnosis of both initial primary cancer and second primary cancer, with a notably higher prevalence of cardio-toxic events, particularly among breast cancer survivors. Contributing socioeconomic factors to these disparities include unfavorable social determinants of health, inadequate insurance coverage, and structural racism within the healthcare system. Additionally, proinflammatory epigenetic modification is hypothesized to be a contributing genetic variation factor. Addressing these disparities requires a multiperspective approach, encompassing efforts to address racial disparities and social determinants of health within the healthcare system, refine healthcare policies and access, and integrate historically stigmatized racial groups into clinical research. Summary: Racial and ethnic disparities persist in cardiovascular outcomes among cancer survivors, driven by multifactorial causes, predominantly associated with social determinants of health. Addressing these healthcare inequities is imperative, and timely efforts must be implemented to narrow the existing gap effectively.
KW - Cancer survivors
KW - Cardio-oncology
KW - Cardiovascular outcomes
KW - Racial disparities
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U2 - 10.1007/s11912-024-01578-7
DO - 10.1007/s11912-024-01578-7
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39002054
AN - SCOPUS:85198368018
SN - 1523-3790
VL - 26
SP - 1205
EP - 1212
JO - Current Oncology Reports
JF - Current Oncology Reports
IS - 10
ER -