Other News Releases in Health Care & Hospitals
E-News Medical Alert: Westside Medical Associates of Los Angeles & Westside Medical Imaging
MINDlink Foundation Launches to Connect the Cerebellum to Cures
Stop & Shop Alerts Customers to Voluntary Recall by Unilever
Other News Releases in Surveys, Polls and Research
Why Holidays Don't Have To Be 'Happy'
H1N1 Pandemic May Have Peaked in October in U.S., According to Quest Diagnostics
Case Studies Offer Inside Look at Effective Ways to Address Global Health Challenges
Journalists and Bloggers
Visit PR Newswire for Journalists for releases, photos, ProfNet experts, and customized feeds just for Media.
View and download archived video content distributed by MultiVu on The Digital Center.
See more news releases in: Health Care & Hospitals, Medical Pharmaceuticals, Surveys, Polls and Research
Pivotal Paper in 'The Oncologist' From National Cancer Institute Predicts Doubling of Cancer Patients
DURHAM, N.C., Jan. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- The Oncologist - the monthly
international peer-reviewed journal for physicians devoted to cancer
patient care - reports the latest information on types of cancer and
survival rates from the National Cancer Institute (NCI)'s Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program in its January 2007 issue.
Today in America, the likelihood of developing cancer during one's
lifetime is approximately one in two for men and one in three for women.
This staggering statistic, based on data from 2001 through 2003, is one
of many recent trends in cancer discussed in this pivotal paper authored by
Dr. Matthew Hayat and colleagues at the National Cancer Institute. The SEER
Program was created as a result of the 1971 National Cancer Act, which
mandated the collection, analysis, and dissemination of cancer data for use
in cancer prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. This includes a profile of
today's cancer patient, information on survival, and progress in
controlling the disease.
Blacks have the highest incidence and mortality rates for men and women
for all cancer sites combined.
Five-year patient survival for all cancer stages combined ranges from
as low as only 16% for lung cancer patient survival to 100% survival for
prostate cancer patients.
Cancer survival varies by stage of disease and race, with lower
survival in blacks compared with whites.
The impact on the future U.S. cancer burden is estimated based on the
growing and aging U.S. population. The number of new cancer patients is
expected to more than double from the current 1.36 million in 2000 to
almost 3.0 million in 2050. This projected doubling of cancer patients in
the next few decades will undoubtedly place a huge burden on society ... to
say nothing of the human toll the disease takes on patients and their
families.
The SEER Program cancer statistics are useful for oncologists and for
health care organizations in counseling newly diagnosed patients and in
planning future cancer care services.
"NCI's SEER program is a finger on the pulse of cancer diagnosis,
treatment, and outcome in the United States. It monitors 26% of the US
population, including 23% of White Americans, 40% of Hispanic Americans,
59% of Asian Americans, 23% of African Americans, and 42% of native
Americans," observed Bruce A. Chabner, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The
Oncologist. "By looking at how frequently cancer occurs in Americans, and
how long they live after the diagnosis," said Dr. Chabner, "the SEER
program can tell public health officials where progress has occurred as
well as where there is a need to redouble our efforts."
The Oncologist is one of the most important peer-reviewed providers of
relevant cancer medicine information. The print edition serves more than
21,000 physicians around the world, and its web-based edition
(www.TheOncologist.com) is read by more than 100,000 every month. The
Journal provides thousands of practicing oncologists contemporary
Continuing Medical Education (CME) credits. The Oncologist is the first and
only journal with online CME approved by the NIH through which physicians
obtain AMA PRA category 1 credits, including courses in Risk Management.
The complete paper is freely obtainable at:
Cancer Statistics, Trends, and Multiple Primary Cancer Analyses from
the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program. Matthew J.
Hayat, Nadia Howlader, Marsha E. Reichman and Brenda K. Edwards.
http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/cgi/content/full/12/1/20
Full-text of all articles published in The Oncologist is freely
available online at www.TheOncologist.com.
Contact: Dr. Martin J. Murphy, Executive Editor P:+919.402.8750;
Martin.Murphy@TheOncologist.com
SOURCE The Oncologist













