Cancer of the lung and bronchus
(hereafter, lung cancer) is the second most common cancer among both men and
women and is the leading cause of cancer death in both sexes. Among men, age-adjusted
lung cancer incidence rates (per 100,000) range from a low of about 14 among
American Indians to a high of 117 among blacks, an eight-fold difference. Between
these two extremes, rates fall into two groups ranging from 42 to 53 for Hispanics,
Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, and Koreans and from 71 to 89 for Vietnamese,
whites, Alaska Natives and Hawaiians. The range among women is much narrower,
from a rate of about 15 among Japanese to nearly 51 among Alaska Natives, only
a three-fold difference. Rates for the remaining female populations fall roughly
into two groups with low rates of 16 to 25 for Korean, Filipino, Hispanic and
Chinese women, and rates of 31 to 44 among Vietnamese, white, Hawaiian and black
women. The rates among men are about two to three times greater than the rates
among women in each of the racial/ethnic groups.
In the 30-54 year
age group, incidence rates among men are double those among women in most of
the racial/ethnic groups. In white non-Hispanics and white Hispanics, however
incidence rates for women are closer to those for men. This suggests that smoking
cessation and prevention programs may have been especially successful among
white men and/or that such programs have not been as effective among white women.
Age-adjusted mortality
rates follow similar racial/ethnic patterns to those for the incidence rates.
Among men, the incidence and mortality rates are very similar. Filipino men
are an exception, with an incidence rate nearly twice as large as their mortality
rate. Incidence rates are also similar to mortality rates among women, with
the exception of Filipinos and Hispanics. In these two groups, incidence rates
are nearly twice as large as mortality rates. Among Hawaiian women, the mortality
rate actually exceeds the incidence rate. This may be due to differences in
the accuracy of race classification on medical records versus death certificates.
Racial/ethnic patterns
are generally consistent within each age group for both incidence and mortality.
An exception is the high incidence and mortality rate in Chinese women aged
70 years and older. This group tends to have low incidence and mortality rates
in the younger age groups.
Cigarette smoking
accounts for nearly 90% of all lung cancers. Passive smoking also contributes
to the development of lung cancer among nonsmokers. Certain occupational exposures
such as asbestos exposure are also known to cause lung cancer. Air pollution
is a probable cause, but makes a relatively small contribution to incidence
and mortality rates. In certain geographic areas of the United States, indoor
exposure to radon may also make a small contribution to the total incidence
of lung cancer.
Source: Miller BA,
Kolonel LN, Bernstein L, Young, Jr. JL, Swanson GM, West D, Key CR, Liff JM,
Glover CS, Alexander GA, et al. (eds). Racial/Ethnic Patterns of Cancer in the
United States 1988-1992, National Cancer Institute. NIH Pub. No. 96-4104. Bethesda,
MD, 1996.
Graphs showing incidence
and mortality for specific racial and ethnic groups including information
that may not be discussed in the text above, is available at the NCI's
Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Web site at: http://seer.cancer.gov/.
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