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Breast Cancer Rises Among Asian American and Pacific Islander Women

Breast Cancer Rises Among Asian American and Pacific Islander Women

Breast cancer survivor Christina Kashiwada near her home in Sacramento, California. Researchers have noticed an uptick in breast cancer rates among Asian American and Pacific Islander women, a group that once had relatively low rates of diagnosis. (Rich Pedroncelli for 黑料吃瓜网 News)

Christina Kashiwada was traveling for work during the summer of 2018 when she noticed a small, itchy lump in her left breast.

She thought little of it at first. She did routine self-checks and kept up with medical appointments. But a relative urged her to get a mammogram. She took the advice and learned she had stage 3 breast cancer, a revelation that stunned her.

鈥淚’m 36 years old, right?鈥 said Kashiwada, a civil engineer in Sacramento, California. 鈥淣o one’s thinking about cancer.鈥

About 11,000 Asian American and Pacific Islander women were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2021 and about 1,500 died. The latest federal data shows the rate of new breast cancer diagnoses in Asian American and Pacific Islander women 鈥 a group that once had relatively low rates of diagnosis 鈥 is rising much faster than that of many other racial and ethnic groups. The trend is especially sharp among young women such as Kashiwada.

About 55 of every 100,000 Asian American and Pacific Islander women under 50 were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2021, surpassing the rate for Black and Hispanic women and on par with the rate for white women, according to from the National Institutes of Health. (Hispanic people can be of any race or combination of races but are grouped separately in this data.)

The rate of new breast cancer cases among Asian American and Pacific Islander women under 50 grew by about 52% from 2000 through 2021. Rates for AAPI women 50 to 64 grew 33% and rates for AAPI women 65 and older grew by 43% during that period. By comparison, the rate for women of all ages, races, and ethnicities grew by 3%.

Breast Cancer Rates for AAPI Women Rise Fastest Among the Young

Researchers have picked up on this trend and are racing to find out why it is occuring within this ethnically diverse group. They suspect the answer is complex, ranging from cultural shifts to pressure-filled lifestyles 鈥 yet they concede it remains a mystery and difficult for patients and their families to discuss because of cultural differences.

, director of the Clinical Breast Cancer Program at UC Davis Health, said the Asian American diaspora is so that simple explanations for the increase in breast cancer aren鈥檛 obvious.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a real trend,鈥 Chew said, adding that 鈥渋t is just difficult to tease out exactly why it is. Is it because we鈥檙e seeing an influx of people who have less access to care? Is it because of many things culturally where they may not want to come in if they see something on their breast?鈥

There鈥檚 urgency to solve this mystery because it鈥檚 costing lives. While women in most ethnic and racial groups are experiencing sharp declines in breast cancer death rates, about Asian American and Pacific Islander women of any age died from breast cancer in 2023, essentially the same death rate as in 2000, according to age-adjusted, provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The breast cancer death rate among all women during that period dropped 30%.

Breast Cancer Death Rates Dropping, but Not for AAPI Women

The CDC does not break out breast cancer death rates for many different groups of Asian American women, such as those of Chinese or Korean descent. It has, though, begun distinguishing between Asian American women and Pacific Islander women.

Nearly 9,000 Asian American women died from breast cancer from 2018 through 2023, compared with about 500 Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander women. However, breast cancer death rates were among Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander women than among Asian American women during that period.

Rates of , , , and cancer, along with rates, have also recently risen significantly among Asian American and Pacific Islander women under 50, NIH data show. Yet breast cancer is much more common among young AAPI women than any of those other types of cancer 鈥 especially concerning because young women are more aggressive forms of the disease, with high mortality rates.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing somewhere almost around a 4% per-year increase,鈥 said , a professor and epidemiologist at the University of California-San Francisco鈥檚 Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing even more than the 4% per-year increase in Asian/Pacific Islander women less than age 50.鈥

Gomez is a lead investigator on a exploring the causes of cancer in Asian Americans. She said there is not yet enough research to know what is causing the recent spike in breast cancer. The answer may involve multiple risk factors over a long period of time.

鈥淥ne of the hypotheses that we're exploring there is the role of stress,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e're asking all sorts of questions about different sources of stress, different coping styles throughout the lifetime.鈥

It鈥檚 likely not just that there鈥檚 more screening. 鈥淲e looked at trends by stage at diagnosis and we are seeing similar rates of increase across all stages of disease,鈥 Gomez said.

, a professor and epidemiologist at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, said the trend may be related to Asian immigrants adopting some lifestyles that put them at higher risk. Setiawan is a breast cancer survivor who was diagnosed a few years ago at the age of 49.

鈥淎sian women, American women, they become more westernized so they have their puberty younger now 鈥 having earlier age at [the first menstrual cycle] is ,鈥 said Setiawan, who is working with Gomez on the cancer study. 鈥淢aybe , we delay childbearing, 鈥 those are all associated with breast cancer risks.鈥

, a professor at the University of California-Davis and an , added that only of NIH funding is devoted to researching cancer among Asian Americans.

AAPI Breast Cancer Death Rates Highest in the West

Whatever its cause, the trend has created years of anguish for many patients.

Kashiwada underwent a mastectomy following her breast cancer diagnosis. During surgery, doctors at UC Davis Health discovered the cancer had spread to lymph nodes in her underarm. She underwent eight rounds of chemotherapy and 20 sessions of radiation treatment.

Throughout her treatments, Kashiwada kept her ordeal a secret from her grandmother, who had helped raise her. Her grandmother never knew about the diagnosis. 鈥淚 didn't want her to worry about me or add stress to her,鈥 Kashiwada said. 鈥淪he just would probably never sleep if she knew that was happening. It was very important to me to protect her.鈥

Kashiwada moved in with her parents. Her mom took a leave from work to help take care of her.

Kashiwada鈥檚 two young children, who were 3 and 6 at the time, stayed with their dad so she could focus on her recovery.

鈥淭he kids would come over after school,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y dad would pick them up and bring them over to see me almost every day while their dad was at work.鈥

Kashiwada spent months regaining strength after the radiation treatments. She returned to work but with a doctor鈥檚 instruction to avoid lifting heavy objects.

Kashiwada had her final reconstructive surgery a few weeks before covid lockdowns began in 2020. But her treatment was not finished.

Her doctors had told her that estrogen fed her cancer, so they gave her medicine to put her through early menopause. The treatment was not as effective as they had hoped. Her doctor performed surgery in 2021 to remove her ovaries.

More recently, she was diagnosed with osteopenia and will start injections to stop bone loss.

Kashiwada said she has moved past many of the negative emotions she felt about her illness and wants other young women, including Asian American women like her, to be aware of their elevated risk.

鈥淣o matter how healthy you think you are, or you're exercising, or whatever you're doing, eating well, which is all the things I was doing 鈥 I would say it does not make you invincible or immune,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ot to say that you should be afraid of everything, but just be very in tune with your body and what your body's telling you.鈥

A photo of Christina Kashiwada standing outside at a park near her home.
Kashiwada had to undergo eight rounds of chemotherapy and 20 sessions of radiation treatment to treat her breast cancer.(Rich Pedroncelli for 黑料吃瓜网 News)

Phillip Reese is a data reporting specialist and an associate professor of journalism at California State University-Sacramento.

This article was produced by 黑料吃瓜网 News, which publishes , an editorially independent service of the . Supplemental support comes from the through .