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Common
Types Of Cancer
-Bladder Cancer
-Melanoma
-Breast Cancer
-Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
-Colon and Rectal
-Cancer Pancreatic Cancer
-Endometrial Cancer
-Prostate Cancer
-Kidney Cancer (Renal Cell)
-Skin (Non-melanoma)
-Leukemia Thyroid
-Lung Cancer
The
list of common cancers includes cancers that are diagnosed with
the greatest frequency in the United States. Cancer incidence statistics
from the American Cancer Society1 and other resources were used
to create the list. To qualify as a common cancer, the estimated
annual incidence for 2005 had to be 25,000 cases or more.
The
most common type of cancer on the list is non-melanoma skin cancer,
with more than 1,000,000 new cases expected in the United States
in 2005. Non-melanoma skin cancers represent about half of all cancers
diagnosed in this country.
The
cancers on the list with the lowest incidence are renal cell cancer
of the kidney and thyroid cancer. The estimated number of new cases
of kidney cancer (renal cell and renal pelvis) for 2005 is 36,160.
Approximately 70% of all kidney cancers are renal cell cancers,2
suggesting that slightly more than 25,000 new cases of renal cell
cancer will be diagnosed in 2005. The estimated number of new cases
of thyroid cancer for 2005 is 25,690.
Because
colon and rectal cancers are often referred to as "colorectal
cancers," these two cancer types were combined for the list.
For 2005, the estimated number of new cases of colon cancer is 104,950,
and the estimated number of new cases of rectal cancer is 40,340.
These numbers are slightly smaller than those estimated for 2004.
Leukemia
as a cancer type includes acute lymphoblastic (or lymphoid) leukemia,
chronic lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, chronic myelogenous
(or myeloid) leukemia, and other forms of leukemia. It is estimated
that more than 34,000 new cases of leukemia will be diagnosed in
the United States in 2005, with acute myeloid leukemia being the
most common type (approximately 12,000 new cases). The total number
of new leukemia cases estimated for 2005 is slightly larger than
the number estimated for 2004.
References
American
Cancer Society: Cancer Facts and Figures 2005. Atlanta, Ga: American
Cancer Society, 2005. Also available online. Last accessed January
24, 2005.
McLaughlin
JK, Lipworth L: Epidemiologic aspects of renal cell cancer. Seminars
in Oncology 21(2):115-123, 2000. [PubMed Abstract]
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