Cancer survival rates or survival statistics tell you the percentage of people who survive a certain type of cancer for a specific amount of time. Cancer statistics often use an overall five-year survival rate.
Survival rates are usually given in percentages. For instance, the overall five-year survival rate for bladder cancer is 77%. That means that of all people who have bladder cancer, 77 of every 100 are living five years after diagnosis. Conversely, 23 out of every 100 are not alive within five years of a bladder cancer diagnosis.
Cancer survival rates are based on research from information gathered on hundreds or thousands of people with a specific cancer. An overall survival rate includes people of all ages and health conditions who have been diagnosed with a specific type of cancer. This also includes those diagnosed very early and those diagnosed very late.
Your healthcare professional may be able to give you more-specific statistics based on your stage of cancer. For instance, 61% of people diagnosed with early-stage lung cancer live for at least five years after diagnosis. The five-year survival rate for people diagnosed with late-stage lung cancer that has spread to other areas of the body is 7%.
Overall survival rates don't specify whether cancer survivors are still undergoing treatment at five years. Survival rates also don't say if they've become cancer-free. Other types of survival rates that give more-specific information include:
- Disease-free survival rate. This is the number of people who have no cancer after treatment.
- Progression-free survival rate. This is the number of people whose cancer is stable after treatment. This includes people who were cured after treatment. It also includes those who still have cancer but treatment is helping to keep the cancer from growing.
Cancer survival rates often use a five-year survival rate. That doesn't mean cancer can't come back after five years. Certain cancers can return many years after first being found and treated. For some cancers, if the cancer has not come back by five years after initial diagnosis, the chance of it returning later is very small. Discuss the risk of your cancer returning with your healthcare professional.