Racial differences in prostate tumor microenvironment: implications for disparate clinical outcomes and potential opportunities

Disparities in cancer incidence and outcome are common among the racial and ethnical minorities in the United States and are of significant social and clinical concern. Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed non-cutaneous malignancy in American men and exhibits substantial racial disparities...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCancer health disparities Vol. 6
Main Authors Goswami, Sandeep, Sarkar, Chandrani, Singh, Seema, Singh, Ajay Pratap, Chakroborty, Debanjan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 2022
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Summary:Disparities in cancer incidence and outcome are common among the racial and ethnical minorities in the United States and are of significant social and clinical concern. Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed non-cutaneous malignancy in American men and exhibits substantial racial disparities with African American men bearing the highest burden in terms of incidence and mortality. A multitude of factors, including socioeconomic, behavioral, and access to healthcare, have been implicated as the underlying causes of such disparities. More recent data also suggest that there are inherent molecular and biological differences in prostate tumors of patients having distinct racial backgrounds. Tumor microenvironment has tremendous impact on the course of cancer progression and clinical outcome and may also contribute to the racial disparities observed in prostate cancer. Therefore, a better understanding of critical differences in the tumor microenvironment components may provide newer directions to study the biological causes of prostate cancer health disparities and may identify novel therapeutic targets. This review discusses the findings related to the tumor microenvironment differences between African American and Caucasian American prostate cancer patients and makes suggestion regarding their potential significance in prostate cancer disparities.
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Authors’ contributions
Conception and design: DC. Initial manuscript writing: SG, CS, and DC. Review and revision of the manuscript: SG, CS, SS, APS and DC.
ISSN:2573-9530