2020
Characterizing participants in the North Carolina Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program (NC BCCCP): A review of 90,000 women.
Tait S, Ren Y, Horton C, Oshima S, Thomas S, Wright S, Caesar A, Plichta J, Hwang E, Greenup R, Rosenberger L, DiLalla G, Menendez C, Tolnitch L, Hyslop T, Nelson D, Fayanju O. Characterizing participants in the North Carolina Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program (NC BCCCP): A review of 90,000 women. Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2020, 38: 101-101. DOI: 10.1200/jco.2020.38.29_suppl.101.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBreast cancerHispanic womenRace/ethnicityUnivariate analysisBreast pathologyCervical cancer control programsOverall breast cancer mortalityNH Black raceBreast cancer preventionFirst breast cancerBreast cancer mortalityCancer control programsNational quality benchmarksUnderserved womenBlack raceCancer mortalityTimeline of careAmerican IndiansCancer preventionLonger TTDNH blacksNH whitesMedian TTDEthnic disparitiesNegative binomial regression
2018
The Effect of Hospital Volume on Breast Cancer Mortality
Greenup R, Obeng-Gyasi S, Thomas S, Houck K, Lane W, Blitzblau R, Hyslop T, Hwang E. The Effect of Hospital Volume on Breast Cancer Mortality. Annals Of Surgery 2018, 267: 375-381. PMID: 27893532, PMCID: PMC5994238, DOI: 10.1097/sla.0000000000002095.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHigh-volume centersNational Cancer Data BaseHospital volumeVolume centersBreast cancerHazard ratioImproved survivalStage 0Case volumeMultivariable Cox proportional hazards modelsMultidisciplinary breast cancer treatmentMultivariable Cox proportional hazardsSurgeons National Cancer Data BaseCox proportional hazards modelAnnual hospital volumeLess common cancersUnilateral breast cancerBreast cancer mortalityBreast cancer patientsCubic spline analysisLog-rank testBreast cancer treatmentCox proportional hazardsProportional hazards modelHigher case volume