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Cancer statistics, 2001. Greenlee RT, Hill-Harmon MB, Murray T, Thun M. CA Cancer J Clin. 2001 Jan-Feb;51(1):15-36. Erratum in: CA Cancer J Clin 2001 Mar-Apr;51(2):144.

Department of Epidemiology and Surveillance Research, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, GA, USA.

Each year the American Cancer Society compiles estimates of the number of new cancer cases and deaths expected in the US in the current year and the most recent data on cancer incidence, mortality, and survival. An estimated 1,268,000 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed in the year 2001 and an estimated 553,400 Americans will die from cancer. Overall cancer incidence and death rates have continued to decrease in men and women since the early 1990s, and the decline in overall cancer mortality has been greater in recent years. Despite reductions in age-adjusted rates of cancer death, the total number of recorded cancer deaths in the US continues to increase, due to an aging and expanding population. Large disparities in cancer incidence and mortality across racial/ethnic groups continue. Black men and women experience higher incidence of cancer and poorer survival than white men and women. The disparity in survival reflects both diagnosis of cancer at later disease stages, and poorer survival within each stage of diagnosis.

 

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