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Annual Report to the Nation Finds Continued Declines in Overall Cancer Rates; Special Feature Highlights Current and Proj

Date:2009-12-08 08:28From:Network Author:Network Click:
Annual Report to the Nation Finds Continued Declines in Overall Cancer Rates; Special Feature Highlights Current and Projected Trends in Colorectal Cancer Rates of new diagnoses and rates of death from all cancers combined declined significa
   -2.1% -1.4% Pancreas _ _ 1.7% 0.1% Prostate -2.4% -4.1% Stomach -2.0% -3.7% -2.7% Thyroid 6.3% Uterus -0.5% _

Trends data are based on the most recent trends in rates and variable time periods. The symbol indicates neither a statistically significant rise nor fall in the rates during the time period studies. Blank spaces indicate cancers that were not in the top 15 for that gender/category.

In the Special Feature section, the authors used modeling projections of colorectal cancer rates to find that, with accelerated cancer control efforts to get more Americans to adopt more favorable health behaviors (such as quitting smoking) and higher use of screening (such as colonoscopy), as well as optimal treatment outcomes for colorectal cancer (such as more effective chemotherapy), there could be an overall colorectal cancer mortality reduction of 50 percent by 2020.

Other highlights from the report show that in men, incidence rates have declined for cancers of the prostate, lung, oral cavity, stomach, brain, colon and rectum, but continue to rise for kidney/renal, liver, and esophageal cancer, as well as for leukemia, myeloma and melanoma. In women, incidence rates decreased for breast, colorectal, uterine, ovarian, cervical and oral cavity cancers, but increased for lung, thyroid, pancreatic, bladder, and kidney cancers, as well as for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, melanoma and leukemia.

"The continued decline in overall cancer rates documents the success we have had with our aggressive efforts to reduce risk in large populations, to provide for early detection, and to develop new therapies that have been successfully applied in this past decade," said NCI Director John E. Niederhuber, M.D. "Yet we cannot be content with this steady reduction in incidence and mortality. We must, in fact, accelerate our efforts to get individualized diagnoses and treatments to all Americans and our belief is that our research efforts and our vision are moving us rapidly in that direction."

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