When Cervical cancer is detected and treated in its early stages, however, the long-term rate of survival is almost 100%.
The survival rate for cervical cancer in the United States is found that 82% of women in the US have a five year survival rate, versus the 73% chance of survival from when in Europe, based on the 2000-02 study by Eurocare, found here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17714993
The survival rate for ovarian cancer varies by the severity of the disease and how early the disease is detected. The typical five-year rate is around 45%, but if diagnosed early, the five-year survival rate can be as high as 90%.
The estimated survival rate for early prostate cancer detection is 93.5% after one year. The rate is 81.4% after five years and after 10 years it is 68.5%.
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.
over 95%
primarily due to routine screening with Pap tests (Pap smear), to identify precancerous and early-invasive stages of cervical cancer.
picture of nasal cancer outside-how does it look and what is the survival rate
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%.
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.
It is possible to survive colon cancer. Cases that are diagnosed early have a much better 5 year survival rate. This is why it is recommended that people get colonoscopies periodically.
The survival rate is much higher the earlier it is found. More information in the following link http://ibdcrohns.about.com/cs/colorecalcancer/a/crcancerstages.htm.
Minority women and women of low socioeconomic status have higher rates of cervical cancer and an increased mortality rate.