When tumors are in the early stages and have not grown into the bladder wall, they can usually be removed by an outpatient surgical procedure. The five-year survival rate for patients with early stage bladder cancer is 85%. Fortunately, most patients with bladder cancer (up to 80%) will be diagnosed with a superficial tumor. If a tumor has grown into the wall of the bladder but has not spread to other organs, treatment usually involves surgical removal of the tumor, or combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy, with a five-year survival rate of 60%-75%. In more advanced cases, with spread of the cancer to other sites in the body, more aggressive treatment plans must be considered. Per: http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=47973
The success rate for bladder chemotherapy treatment is getting better, but is still not excellent. The survival rate is about 14 months for advanced cancer cases.
bladder cancer has a very good survival rate. if the cancer is discovered early than the survival rate or five years is 94%. this is very good compared to other cancers we know about today. however when the cancer has spread to the organs in the pelvic region than the rates drop down to 49% and once it has spread to the other organs the rate falls to 6%. this is a fact that bladder cancer is more common in men then women.- my great-grandfather has this :/
The success rate for radiation in bladder cancer is 67 percent.
picture of nasal cancer outside-how does it look and what is the survival rate
Patients who have stage 4 bladder cancer have a low survival rate. The treatment includes chemotherapy, radical cystectomy, external-beam radiation therapy and urinary diversion or cystectomy .
The breast cancer survival rate varies greatly on the patient and their response to treatment. Breast cancer survival rates for early detection are 100%. Stage 2 breast cancer has a survival rate of 93 percent, the stage 3 survival rate is 72 percent, and the stage 4 survival rate is 22 percent.
The survival rate depends on what stage your cancer is diagnosed in. For one, it is 74 percent, for stage four, it is 6 percent.
The survival rates for colon cancer depend on in which stage the cancer is originally detected. If detected at an early stage, the five year survival rate can be as high as 90%, however if the cancer goes undetected into a distant stage, the five year survival rate can drop dramatically, becoming 12%.
Probably about 20%.
When cervical cancer is detected and treated in its early stages, however, the long-term rate of survival is almost 100%.
Colon cancer survival rates vary greatly depending on which stage the cancer is in when diagnosed. On average, a typical 5-year survival rate is between 55% and 63%.
Thyroid cancer is the least deadly, with a 95% survival rate