pubmed:abstractText |
An ethnic analysis was made of 8947 cases of primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors seen at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP), Washington, DC, from 1971 to 1985. Results showed a slightly higher frequency of primary CNS tumors in whites than in blacks with a white:black case ratio of 9:1 against the white:black population ratio in the United States of 7.4:1. Gliomas appeared to be twofold more frequent in whites than in blacks with a white:black case ratio of 12.1:1. However, meningiomas and pituitary adenomas were more common in blacks with a white:black case ratio of 6.7:1 and 4.2:1, respectively. When these results were compared with the results of a previous identical study using similar materials collected at AFIP from 1958 to 1970, the relative paucity of gliomas and higher frequency of meningiomas and pituitary adenomas in American blacks is again confirmed, thus re-emphasizing the importance of genetic factors in the genesis of primary CNS tumors. The remarkable decreasing white:black case ratio of primary CNS tumors as a whole (9:1 compared with 13.7:1) since 1970 probably reflects the socioeconomic improvement of American blacks during the same period.
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