I can answer that.
I don't think there were actually any women of colour on the working group that actually addressed breast cancer. I don't think that necessarily influenced what they said. I will grant that they weren't making racist recommendations because no people of colour were in the room. However, I do think that it's symbolic of a disregard for racial equity.
One of the things that I think is also indicative of that is their use of GRADE to elevate the ancient RCTs above the observational studies. Ninety-eight per cent of those RCTs were done from the sixties to the eighties on white women. They put that evidence as the top level of evidence, and everything else, which may have been much more diverse, was given a lower importance, so there is a systemic form of racism there.
I think the fact that there were no women of colour on the working group is possibly a symptom of the same disease.