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Young Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders face highest cancer death rates

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The National Cancer Institute has revealed for the first time that young Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders are the race group that experiences the highest rates of cancer death among people their age in the U.S.

A manuscript published April 19 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute reports that between 2018 and 2020, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders between the ages of 20 and 49 had the highest death rate from any cancer, compared to 20 to 49-year-olds from other racial and ethnic groups (American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian, Black, Latino or White).

“These disparities clearly demonstrate the importance of disaggregation of Asians and NHPIs from one another,” said University of Hawai‘i Cancer Center researcher and Hawai‘i Tumor Registry Principal Investigator, Brenda Hernandez.

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Until recently, race reporting at the federal level in the U.S. lumped Americans of Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander ancestry all in a single category. In 1997, the “Asian/Pacific Islander” category was split into “Asian” and “Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander.” It took another 10 years to transition fully to using the updated race list on individual states’ death certificates, so statistics like cancer death rates for this new set of races have only been reportable since 2018.

Because of Hawai‘i’s unique multiethnic composition, Hawai‘i Tumor Registry, responsible for cancer surveillance in the state of Hawai‘i, has long collected and reported these more granular statistics.

“In Hawai‘i, Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander ethnic communities have experienced dramatically different cancer burdens,” Hernandez said.

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Last year, Hawai‘i Tumor Registry’s Hawai‘i Cancer at a Glance revealed that Native Hawaiian women have higher death rates from breast and lung cancers than do women of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, other Asian and white races in Hawai‘i.

Under the leadership of its new director Naoto Ueno, the University of Hawai‘i Cancer Center is taking a “multifactorial approach” to addressing these disparities. This includes construction on the Early Phase Clinical Research Center, which would allow Cancer Center researchers to conduct innovative trials in Kaka‘ako.

It also involves efforts led by the Cancer Center in collaboration with the state, legislators, local healthcare systems, advisory boards, patient advocacy groups and others.

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“We are trying to establish more robust clinical research so that we can provide more clinical trials that would allow people to stay in state,” Ueno said.

“Even for clinical trials, if we can determine the genomic and molecular connection between the kind of aggressive disease you have, we can potentially personalize treatment based on racial or ethnic background,” Ueno said. “There are many different opportunities with pharmaceutical companies and more.”

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