Albuquerque Journal

US cancer diagnoses in 2023 may hit 2M

- BY LINDA SEARING

Nearly 2 million Americans — 1,958,310, to be exact — are expected to be diagnosed with cancer this year, and 609,820 people will die of the disease, the American Cancer Society says.

The projected number of deaths would represent a 33% drop in the cancer mortality rate since 1991, and 3.8 million deaths averted, according to the organizati­on’s annual report on cancer trends and statistics, published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.

The reduction includes a 65% drop in the past decade in cervical cancer rates in women in their early 20s, which the report attributes to the introducti­on of the human papillomav­irus vaccine.

Conversely, prostate cancer rates have been rising by 3% a year after two decades of decline and led by the increased diagnosis of advanced disease.

Using data from cancer registries and the National Center for Health Statistics, the report attributes the overall decline in cancer deaths to more widespread screening, advances in treatments for some types of cancer, and behavioral changes, such as less tobacco use. Cancer is the second most common cause of death in the U.S., exceeded only by heart disease.

Anyone can develop cancer, but 88% of those in the U.S. diagnosed with cancer are 50 or older, and 57% are 65 or older, according to a consumer-oriented version of the report available on the American Cancer Society website.

At least 42% of newly diagnosed cancers are “potentiall­y avoidable” through behavioral changes, screenings, vaccinatio­n and infection treatment, the report says.

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