Breast Cancer
Incidence
Breast cancer is the most
common form of cancer in women. In spite of medical advances, breast cancer remains a deadly disease all over
the world, killing about 519,000 people worldwide in 2004. In the US alone, breast cancer kills nearly 41,116
women and 375 men each year. According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), it is estimated that 192,370
women were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009; about 40,170 women died of it.
However, the Incidence of
breast cancer varies with age and race; from 2002-2006, the median age at diagnosis for breast cancer was 61
years of age. Age and percentage of women diagnosed with breast
cancer during 2002-2006 were approximately:
- 0.0% for women under
age 20
- 1.9% for women between
20 and 34
- 10.5% for women
between 35 and 44
- 22.5% for women
between 45 and 54
- 23.7% for women
between 55 and 64
- 19.6% for women
between 65 and 74
- 16.2% for women
between 75 and 84
- 5.5% for women aged 85
years or older
Incidence and death rates by race
|
Race
|
Incidence
|
Death
|
|
White
|
127.8 per
100,000 women
|
23.9 per
100,000 women
|
|
Black
|
117.7 per
100,000 women
|
33.0 per
100,000 women
|
|
Asian/Pacific Islander
|
89.5 per
100,000 women
|
12.5 per
100,000 women
|
|
American
Indian/Alaska Native
|
74.4 per
100,000 women
|
17.6 per
100,000 women
|
|
Hispanic
|
88.3 per
100,000 women
|
15.5 per
100,000 women
|
|
All Races
|
123.8 per
100,000 women
|
24.5 per
100,000 women
|
Breast Cancer
Types
Causes
|