There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
This article is the American Cancer Society's biennial update on female breast cancer
statistics in the United States, including data on incidence, mortality, survival,
and screening. Over the most recent 5-year period (2012-2016), the breast cancer incidence
rate increased slightly by 0.3% per year, largely because of rising rates of local
stage and hormone receptor-positive disease. In contrast, the breast cancer death
rate continues to decline, dropping 40% from 1989 to 2017 and translating to 375,900
breast cancer deaths averted. Notably, the pace of the decline has slowed from an
annual decrease of 1.9% during 1998 through 2011 to 1.3% during 2011 through 2017,
largely driven by the trend in white women. Consequently, the black-white disparity
in breast cancer mortality has remained stable since 2011 after widening over the
past 3 decades. Nevertheless, the death rate remains 40% higher in blacks (28.4 vs
20.3 deaths per 100,000) despite a lower incidence rate (126.7 vs 130.8); this disparity
is magnified among black women aged <50 years, who have a death rate double that of
whites. In the most recent 5-year period (2013-2017), the death rate declined in Hispanics
(2.1% per year), blacks (1.5%), whites (1.0%), and Asians/Pacific Islanders (0.8%)
but was stable in American Indians/Alaska Natives. However, by state, breast cancer
mortality rates are no longer declining in Nebraska overall; in Colorado and Wisconsin
in black women; and in Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia in white women. Breast cancer
was the leading cause of cancer death in women (surpassing lung cancer) in four Southern
and two Midwestern states among blacks and in Utah among whites during 2016-2017.
Declines in breast cancer mortality could be accelerated by expanding access to high-quality
prevention, early detection, and treatment services to all women.