New York Post

Cancer rates & deaths fall

- By IVAN LEVINGSTON

Fewer Americans are getting cancer, and more of those who do are surviving the disease, according to a new study.

In 2015, the most recent year with available data, cancer deaths dropped to 158.6 per 100,000 people, according to a report released Thursday by the American Cancer Society. That’s 26 percent lower than in 1991, according to the report, or about 2.4 million fewer deaths over that period.

While a number of breakthrou­gh, high-cost drugs have improved the outlook for people with some deadly cancers, the biggest cause of the decrease in deaths is that Americans are smoking less.

“It’s the low-hanging fruit,” said Ahmedin Jemal, the cancer group’s vice president of surveillan­ce and health services research. “We’re going to continue to see this decline because of prevention — primarily reduction in smoking prevalence.”

Jemal said that while innovative new treatments will likely affect the mortality rate, he expects preventati­ve measures to have the strongest effect in the immediate future.

Since the cancer mortality rate peaked in 1991, it has fallen more sharply in men than in women. Lungcancer death rates fell 45 percent among men between 1990 and 2015. For women, the death rate declined 19 percent between 2002 and 2015, according to the report.

“We can do more to accelerate the reduction in mortality rate” by cutting rates of smoking and obesity, said Jemal, the report’s senior author. Obesity is a risk factor for some malignanci­es, including pancreatic cancer.

Other cancers have also become less lethal. The mortality rate for female breast cancer declined 39 percent between 1989 and 2015, and the rate for prostate cancer fell 52 percent between 1993 and 2015.

Increased detection of breast cancer at early stages through mammograph­y and improved treatment are behind the drop in breast cancer, Jemal said.

Death rates from other cancers have increased in recent years, including uterine cancers, liver cancers and pancreatic cancer in men.

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