As with most cancers, survival for uterine cancer is improving. One-year
Uterine Cancer (C54-C55), Age-Standardised One-Year Net Survival, Women (Aged 15-99), England and Wales, 1971-2011
Five- and ten-year survival has increased by an even greater amount than one-year survival since the early 1970s. Five-year age-standardised net survival for uterine cancer has increased from 59% during 1971-1972 to a predicted survival of 79% during 2010-2011 in England and Wales – an absolute survival difference of 20 percentage points.[1]
Uterine Cancer (C54-C55), Age-Standardised Five-Year Net Survival, Women (Aged 15-99), England and Wales, 1971-2011
Five-year survival for 2010-2011 is predicted using an excess hazard statistical model
Ten-year age-standardised net survival for uterine cancer has increased from 55% during 1971-1972 to a predicted survival of 78% during 2010-2011 in England and Wales - an absolute survival difference of 22 percentage points.[1] Overall, more than three-quarters of women diagnosed with uterine cancer today are predicted to survive their disease for at least ten years.
Uterine Cancer (C54-C55), Age-Standardised Ten-Year Net Survival, Women (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
About this data
Data is for: England and Wales, 1971-2011, ICD-10 C54-C55