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open access: Cancer statistics, 2016
Article first published online: 7 JAN 2016
Ovary | (est. new cases) 22,280 | (est. deaths) | 14,240 |
Abstract
Each
year, the American Cancer Society estimates the numbers of new cancer
cases and deaths that will occur in the United States in the current
year and compiles the most recent data on cancer incidence, mortality,
and survival. Incidence data were collected by the National Cancer
Institute (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results [SEER] Program),
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (National Program of
Cancer Registries), and the North American Association of Central Cancer
Registries. Mortality data were collected by the National Center for
Health Statistics. In 2016, 1,685,210 new cancer cases and 595,690
cancer deaths are projected to occur in the United States. Overall
cancer incidence trends (13 oldest SEER registries) are stable in women,
but declining by 3.1% per year in men (from 2009-2012), much of which
is because of recent rapid declines in prostate cancer diagnoses. The
cancer death rate has dropped by 23% since 1991, translating to more
than 1.7 million deaths averted through 2012. Despite this progress,
death rates are increasing for cancers of the liver, pancreas, and
uterine corpus, and cancer is now the leading cause of death in 21
states, primarily due to exceptionally large reductions in death from
heart disease. Among children and adolescents (aged birth-19 years),
brain cancer has surpassed leukemia as the leading cause of cancer death
because of the dramatic therapeutic advances against leukemia.
Accelerating progress against cancer requires both increased national
investment in cancer research and the application of existing cancer
control knowledge across all segments of the population.
CA Cancer J Clin 2016;7–30. © 2015 American Cancer Society.
CA Cancer J Clin 2016;7–30. © 2015 American Cancer Society.
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