Pancreatic cancer survival statistics

Improvement

Change in pancreatic cancer 10-year survival between the 1970s and 2010s, UK

One-year age-standardised Open a glossary item net survival for pancreatic cancer in men has increased from 10% during 1971-1972 to 22% during 2010-2011 in England and Wales – an absolute survival difference Open a glossary item of 11 percentage points.[1] In women, one-year survival has increased from 11% to 20% over the same time period (a difference of 9 percentage points).

Pancreatic Cancer (C25), Age-Standardised One-Year Net Survival, Adults (Aged 15-99), England and Wales, 1971-2011

Unlike the majority of cancers, five- and ten-year survival for pancreatic cancer has not shown much improvement since the early 1970s. In men and women, five-year age-standardised net survival for pancreatic cancer has not increased significantly between 1971-1972 and 2010-2011 in England and Wales.[1]

Pancreatic Cancer (C25), Age-Standardised Five-Year Net Survival, Adults (Aged 15-99), England and Wales, 1971-2011

Five-year survival for 2010-2011 is predicted using an excess hazard statistical model

Ten-year survival has followed the same trend as five-year survival since the early 1970s, with no significant increase in either men or women between 1971-1972 and 2010-2011 in England and Wales.[1] Overall, only 1% of people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer today are predicted to survive their disease for at least ten years.

Pancreatic Cancer (C25), Age-Standardised Ten-Year Net Survival, Adults (Aged 15-99), England and Wales 1971-2011

Ten-year survival for 2005-2006 and 2010-2011 is predicted using an excess hazard statistical model

References

  1. Data were provided by London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine on request, 2014.

About this data

Data is for: England and Wales, 1971-2011, ICD-10 C25

Last reviewed:

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