Statistics About Bile Duct Ca... Health Article

Advertisement
Marketplace
Licensed from

Some people use statistical reports to try to figure out their chance of getting cancer. Or they use them to try to figure out their chance of being cured. Statistics show what happens with large groups of people. Because no two  people are alike, statistics cannot be used to know or predict what will happen to a particular person.

These are some 2007 statistics about bile duct cancer, from the American Cancer Society.

  • About 19,000 people will be diagnosed with primary liver or bile duct cancer this year. About 4,000 of those people will have bile duct cancer that develops outside their liver.

  • Asian Americans are the most likely to get bile duct cancer. They are also more likely to die of it. This is partly because a parasitic infection of the bile ducts is more common in Asia. This parasite raises the risk for bile duct cancer.

  • Men of all ethnic groups are more likely to get bile duct cancer than women. More than twice as many men as women will develop the cancer.

  • People who have distal bile duct cancer that is found early have a 5-year survival rate of about 30%. Only about 20% of bile duct cancer is found at an early stage. The survival rate is better if the cancer is found at an early stage, before it has spread.

Reviewer Name: Coleman, JoAnn RN, MS, ACNP, AOCN;Sun, Weijing MD
Date Last Reviewed: 12-14-2005
Published Date: 05-23-2007
 
Advertisement
Back to Top