San Francisco Chronicle

Latinos survive cancer longer

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LOS ANGELES — Researcher­s have called it the “Hispanic paradox”: When it comes to breast cancer, prostate cancer and heart disease, Latino patients in the United States survive longer after diagnosis than their non-latino white and black counterpar­ts.

It’s the same for lung cancer, said scientists at the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami in a paper published online this week by the journal Cancer.

Querying a vast database that tracks U.S. cancer cases, the researcher­s looked at 172,398 patients diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer, a common subtype of the disease, in the United States from 1988 to 2007.

Overall, the 18,206 Latino patients had a 15 percent lower risk of dying during the study than the non-latino white patients. Black patients were slightly more likely to die than non-latino white patients.

The Latino patients were more likely to have less-deadly forms of lung cancer than non-latino whites or blacks — and less likely to have the most aggressive types of the disease. There were no significan­t difference­s in mortality between Latino patients who were born in the United States and those who were born abroad, the study found.

The University of Miami researcher­s did not know why Latino patients tended to live longer, but suggested that it might be because they smoke less or it might have something to do with genetics.

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