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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 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 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%.
The patients attitude, and what stage the cancer was found in.
It depends on the type of cancer and what grade/stage it is
Ovarian cancer can be treated with rounds of chemotherapy. The earlier the treatment, the greater the chance of survival. Stage 1 of the cancer has a 90 percent survival rate, while stage 4 only has a survival rate of 10 percent.
Overall survival after gastrectomy for gastric cancer varies greatly by the stage of disease at the time of surgery. For early gastric cancer, the five-year survival rate is as high as 80-90%; for late-stage disease, the prognosis is bad.
the five year survival rate drops to 30% for Stage IV.
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Yes & No. It depends on what stage the cancer is on e.g. the 1st or 2nd stage is not that dangerous or harmful, but if it is the 3rd stage or above that then they are less chances of survival. Im not really sure about the 3rd stage but above that, YES there is most probably less survival
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%.
Persons who have cancerous spread to other distant places within the body (metastases) have stage IV cancer and the worst prognosis (potential for survival).