Is It A Fact That African American Men At More Risk From Prostate Cancer Than White Men?

Statistics show that African American men are at greater risk of dying from prostate cancer than white men and the majority of statisticians agree that the risk in the case of black men is approximately two and a half times that of white men. But, are these statistics misleading?

The answer might come from a study conducted not long ago in North Carolina. The study involved some 253 white men and 84 black men between the ages of 40 and 75 who were diagnosed with prostate cancer between 2001 and 2004.

From A Nurse - Choosing Conventional Or Natural Treatments For Prostate Cancer

About 80 percent of men who reach the age of 80 have prostate cancer. Men have traditionally been less likely to seek medical attention than women, especially for minor problems which often serve as warning signs for more serious underlying illness. In most men, prostate cancer grows very slowly: most men will never know they have the condition.

Early prostate cancer is confined to the prostate gland itself; most of the patients with this type of cancer can live for years without any problems. Prostate cancer is characterized by ‘grade’ and ’stage’; grade is given to indicate how quickly a cancer is growing — the higher the grade, the more likely it is that the cancer will grow and spread rapidly and the size and extent of the tumor will determine its stage.

The Majority Of Asian Men Show A Greater Ability To Survive Prostate Cancer

After skin cancer, prostate cancer is now the most frequently seen type of cancer in American men and it is predicted that just about 220,000 men in the United States will be diagnosed as having prostate cancer during 2007 and that approximately 27,000 men will die from the disease.

However, as with many conditions, prostate cancer survival rates are not the same around the globe and this should give us the data that will allow us to improve our treatment methods.

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