The numbers are kind of staggering. If you’re black or Latino, your risk for prostate cancer is a lot higher.
“Prostate cancer affects men of all walks of life but it affects them differently,” says Dr. Edwin Posadas, Director of Translational Oncology and the Medical Director of the Urologic Oncology Program at Cedars-Sinai. For example, the incidence of prostate cancer in African-American men is 60 percent higher, and they are two to three times more likely to die from the disease.
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