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This represents about 3% of the almost seven million deaths due to cancer that year, and about 0.35% of all deaths from any cause. [79] Of the sixteen separate sites the body compared, leukemia was the 12th most common class of neoplastic disease and the 11th most common cause of cancer-related death. [ 79 ]
In 2015 about 3.8 million women were affected globally and it resulted in 90,000 deaths. [4] [5] Endometrial cancer is relatively common while uterine sarcomas are rare. [3] In the United States, uterine cancers represent 3.5% of new cancer cases. [8] They most commonly occur in women between the ages of 45 and 74 with a median age of diagnosis ...
Higher rates of liver cancer occur where hepatitis B and C are common, including Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. [3] Males are more often affected with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than females. [3] Diagnosis is most frequent among those 55 to 65 years old. [2] The leading cause of liver cancer is cirrhosis due to hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or ...
The time between hepatitis B infection and development into HCC can be years, even decades, but from diagnosis of HCC to death, the average survival period is only 5.9 months according to one Chinese study during the 1970-80s, or 3 months (median survival time) in sub-Saharan Africa according to Manson's textbook of tropical diseases. HCC is ...
[3] A fourth type of cancer that arises in the pancreas is the intraductal tubulopapillary neoplasm. This type was recognised by the WHO in 2010 and constitutes about 1–3% of all pancreatic neoplasms. Mean age at diagnosis is 61 years (range 35–78 years). About 50% of these lesions become invasive.
[3] [26] It is the second-most common cause of female-specific cancer after breast cancer, accounting for around 8% of both total cancer cases and total cancer deaths in women. [ 27 ] 88% (2020 figure) of cervical cancers and 90% of deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and 2% (2020 figure) in high-income countries (HICs) .
[3] The distance between the Antarctic Circle and the Tropic of Cancer is essentially constant as they move in tandem. This is based on an assumption of a constant equator, but the precise location of the equator is not truly fixed. See: equator, axial tilt and circles of latitude for additional details.