- Colorectal cancer is the 4th most common cancer diagnosed in Connecticut men and the 3rd most common cancer diagnosed in Connecticut women.
- An average 889 new cases of malignant colorectal cancer were diagnosed in Connecticut men and 888 in Connecticut women during 2007-2011.
- In 2011 Connecticut had the 25th highest rate of new colorectal cancers detected men in the United States and the 31st highest rate detected in women.
- Colorectal cancer is the 4th leading cause of cancer-related death in Connecticut men and the 2nd leading cause of cancer-related death in Connecticut women.
- In 2011 Connecticut had the 50th highest rate of death from colorectal cancer in men in the United States and the 45th highest rate in women.
- 248 Connecticut men and 273 Connecticut women died from colorectal cancer in 2005.
Trends and New Cases
NOTES
1. Malignant (invasive) cancers are those that have spread (or ‘invaded’) into cells beyond the layer of tissue in which they first developed. When a cancer spreads to a different part of the body, it is called metastatic cancer. In situ cancers are early cancers that have not invaded through the immediate layer of tissue. A benign tumor is histologically (microscopically) non-cancerous and does not spread to other parts of the body.
Tumor registries collect information on all malignant and in situ cancers (excluding basal and squamous cell skin cancers and in situ cancers of the cervix) and benign tumors of the brain and central nervous system.
2. Cancer data for the United States are collected through two federally funded programs: the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program of the National Cancer Institute and the National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR) of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The SEER program was established in 1973 to provide an authoritative source of information on cancer incidence and survival in the United States and currently covers approximately 26% of the United States population. The NPCR was set up in 1992 to extend cancer data coverage to the remainder of the United States population, and to assist non-SEER registries in gathering complete and high quality data. For the period 2000-2004, 39 registries achieved sufficiently high data quality for inclusion in national cancer incidence figures. See http://www.cancer-rates.info/naaccr for further details.
Connecticut Tumor Registry is one of the original SEER registries and is the oldest tumor registry in the United States.
3. Rates of new cancer cases or deaths are the numbers of cases or deaths in a given number of men or women (usually 100,000) in a year. Because the risk of cancer increases with age, rates are usually age-adjusted, which allows rates in different groups of people to be compared even when one group has a higher proportion of older people. Except for rates in different age groups, the rates presented here have been age-adjusted.
4. Screening is looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms. This can help find cancer at an early stage when it may be easier to treat. By the time symptoms appear, cancer may have begun to spread. There are several different tests that can be used to screen for colorectal cancers. Click click on this link for the Colorectal Cancer Facts page for more information on colorectal cancer screening.
5. To monitor cancer rates in different racial and ethnic groups, cancer registries collect information on race and Hispanic ethnicity. Although ethnicity data are required to be reported, they are not always provided. Cancer registries supplement their ethnicity data using a nationally accepted method based on an individual’s names. However, there is potential for some misclassification using this method, particularly in women due to the frequent absence of maiden names in cancer registry databases.
The ‘Other’ race category includes men and women of American Indian, Alaskan Native, Asian and Pacific Island backgrounds.
6. The stage of a cancer is a measure of how far the cancer has spread at the time of diagnosis. Stage is usually based on the size of the tumor, whether lymph nodes contain cancer, and whether the cancer has spread (metastasized) from the original site to other parts of the body. Localized (early stage) cancer is limited to the organ in which it began, without evidence of spread. Regional cancer has spread beyond the original (primary) site to nearby lymph nodes or organs and tissues. Distant (late stage) cancer has spread from the primary site to distant organs or distant lymph nodes. Unstaged cancers are those for which there is not enough information to indicate a stage.
7. The survival rate is a measure of how long people live after diagnosis with cancer. The relative survival rate is defined as the ratio of a cancer patient's chance of surviving a given time interval to that of a person of the same age and sex in the general US population (i.e., the rate has been adjusted for mortality in the general population). The survival rates presented here are for men and women diagnosed in 1996-2000 and followed up to the end of December 2005.