Health & Fitness
How Many New Cancer Cases Are Expected In Colorado In 2019
A new study predicted the U.S. will see about 1.8 million new cancer cases this year. Here's what Colorado can expect.

ACROSS COLORADO – The rate at which Americans die from cancer has fallen 27 percent since 1991, meaning about 2.6 million people are alive today who wouldn’t be had cancer death rates remained at their peak. That’s the good news in a new study published Tuesday by the American Cancer Society.
But cancer is still the second leading cause of death in America. And researchers estimate there will be about 1.76 million new cancer cases this year. That includes about 28,600 in Colorado, where breast cancer is expected to make up the highest number of the new cases, followed by lung/bronchus cancer and prostate.
Meanwhile, lung cancer is expected to cause the highest number deaths in our state, followed by colo-rectal cancer and female breast cancer.
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Here’s a breakdown of what Colorado can expect:
- Female breast
- Estimated new cases: 4,180
- Uterine cervix
- Estimated new cases: 170
- Colon and rectum
- Estimated new cases: 1,940
- Uterine corpus
- Estimated new cases: 830
- Leukemia
- Estimated new cases: 810
- Lung and bronchus
- Estimated new cases: 2,690
- Melanoma of the skin
- Estimated new cases: 1,830
- Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
- Estimated new cases: 1,130
- Prostate
- Estimated new cases: 2,270
- Urinary Bladder
- Estimated new cases: 1,210
Many of the new cases across the country will involve the digestive system. Overall, the researchers predicted there will be more than 328,000 new cancer cases involving organs such as the esophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, liver and pancreas. There will be an estimated 295,000 new cancer cases involving the genital system, 271,000 involving female breasts and 246,000 involving the respiratory system.
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Among men, prostate cancer alone will account for about one in five cases.
For women, 50 percent of all new diagnoses are expected to be of breast, lung and colorectal cancers. Breast cancer alone will account for an estimated 30 percent of the new cases for women.
The researchers also noted that while persisting racial gaps in cancer deaths are “slowly narrowing,” socioeconomic inequalities are widening — particularly when it comes to the most preventable types of cancers. Compared with the wealthiest counties, death rates in the poorest counties were twice as high for cervical cancer and 40 percent higher for male lung and liver cancers, the study found.
“In contemporary times, the prevalence of behaviors that increase cancer incidence and mortality are vastly higher among residents of the poorest counties, including double the prevalence of smoking and obesity compared to residents of the wealthiest counties,” the study said. “Poverty is also associated with lower cancer screening prevalence, later stage diagnosis, and a lower likelihood of optimal treatment.”
By Dan Hampton, Patch National Staff
Photo credit: Chris Hondros/Getty Images
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