TY - JOUR AU1 - Dean, Lorraine AU2 - Gehlert, Sarah AU3 - Neuhouser, Marian AU4 - Oh, April AU5 - Zanetti, Krista AU6 - Goodman, Melody AU7 - Thompson, Beti AU8 - Visvanathan, Kala AU9 - Schmitz, Kathryn AB - Greater attention to social factors, such as race/ethnicity, socioeconomic position, and others, are needed across the cancer continuum, including breast cancer, given differences in tumor biology and genetic variants have not completely explained the persistent Black/White breast cancer mortality disparity. In this commentary, we use examples in breast cancer risk assessment and survivorship to demonstrate how the failure to appropriately incorporate social factors into the design, recruitment, and analysis of research studies has resulted in missed opportunities to reduce persistent cancer disparities. The conclusion offers recommendations for how to better document and use information on social factors in cancer research and care by (1) increasing education and awareness about the importance of inclusion of social factors in clinical research; (2) improving testing and documentation of social factors by incorporating them into journal guidelines and reporting stratified results; and (3) including social factors to refine extant tools that assess cancer risk and assign cancer care. Implementing the recommended changes would enable more effective design and implementation of interventions and work toward eliminating cancer disparities by accounting for the social and environmental contexts in which cancer patients live and are treated. TI - Social factors matter in cancer risk and survivorship JF - Cancer Causes & Control DO - 10.1007/s10552-018-1043-y DA - 2018-05-30 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/springer-journals/social-factors-matter-in-cancer-risk-and-survivorship-GGHyB03FR0 SP - 611 EP - 618 VL - 29 IS - 7 DP - DeepDyve ER -