Incidence Rate Report for Illinois by County
All Races (includes Hispanic), Both Sexes, All Cancer Sites, All Ages Sorted by Rate
|
County
|
Annual Incidence Rate† over rate period (95% Confidence Interval)
|
Average Annual Count
|
Rate Period
|
|
Illinois
6
|
484.9 (483.2, 486.6)
|
62,965
|
2005-2009
|
|
US (SEER+NPCR)
1
|
465.0 (464.7, 465.4)
|
§
|
2005-2009
|
|
Christian County
6
|
565.7 (534.2, 598.8)
|
247
|
2005-2009
|
|
Macon County
6
|
563.6 (545.4, 582.4)
|
748
|
2005-2009
|
|
Ford County
6
|
555.6 (506.7, 608.3)
|
100
|
2005-2009
|
|
Gallatin County
6
|
555.1 (483.6, 635.2)
|
46
|
2005-2009
|
|
Clay County
6
|
551.6 (503.2, 603.6)
|
100
|
2005-2009
|
|
Crawford County
6
|
551.1 (510.1, 594.7)
|
136
|
2005-2009
|
|
Franklin County
6
|
548.7 (520.0, 578.6)
|
287
|
2005-2009
|
|
Fulton County
6
|
543.1 (513.5, 574.1)
|
262
|
2005-2009
|
|
Johnson County
6
|
542.8 (490.8, 599.0)
|
82
|
2005-2009
|
|
Grundy County
6
|
540.8 (510.3, 572.6)
|
240
|
2005-2009
|
|
La Salle County
6
|
534.4 (517.0, 552.3)
|
729
|
2005-2009
|
|
Greene County
6
|
530.5 (482.9, 581.8)
|
94
|
2005-2009
|
|
Vermilion County
6
|
530.3 (509.9, 551.3)
|
526
|
2005-2009
|
|
Morgan County
6
|
528.7 (498.0, 561.0)
|
228
|
2005-2009
|
|
Peoria County
6
|
528.4 (514.2, 543.0)
|
1,067
|
2005-2009
|
|
Mason County
6
|
527.5 (482.8, 575.6)
|
107
|
2005-2009
|
|
Tazewell County
6
|
527.1 (511.0, 543.6)
|
826
|
2005-2009
|
|
Marion County
6
|
523.5 (495.1, 553.0)
|
267
|
2005-2009
|
|
Calhoun County
6
|
522.5 (448.7, 606.3)
|
37
|
2005-2009
|
|
Bond County
6
|
522.1 (478.4, 568.8)
|
107
|
2005-2009
|
|
Coles County
6
|
520.6 (493.1, 549.3)
|
277
|
2005-2009
|
|
Richland County
6
|
520.5 (476.7, 567.6)
|
110
|
2005-2009
|
|
Edgar County
6
|
519.3 (478.9, 562.5)
|
127
|
2005-2009
|
|
Livingston County
6
|
518.1 (488.2, 549.4)
|
232
|
2005-2009
|
|
Moultrie County
6
|
517.9 (470.8, 568.7)
|
93
|
2005-2009
|
|
Logan County
6
|
517.6 (483.7, 553.4)
|
177
|
2005-2009
|
|
Montgomery County
6
|
515.9 (483.3, 550.2)
|
193
|
2005-2009
|
|
Sangamon County
6
|
513.0 (499.5, 526.8)
|
1,124
|
2005-2009
|
|
Lee County
6
|
510.1 (479.9, 541.8)
|
216
|
2005-2009
|
|
Will County
6
|
509.3 (500.6, 518.2)
|
2,754
|
2005-2009
|
|
Kankakee County
6
|
508.7 (490.5, 527.3)
|
601
|
2005-2009
|
|
Cumberland County
6
|
508.3 (454.8, 566.6)
|
68
|
2005-2009
|
|
Alexander County
6
|
507.4 (448.4, 572.6)
|
56
|
2005-2009
|
|
Massac County
6
|
507.3 (462.7, 555.2)
|
99
|
2005-2009
|
|
Williamson County
6
|
506.2 (484.2, 529.1)
|
408
|
2005-2009
|
|
McDonough County
6
|
506.0 (470.6, 543.5)
|
162
|
2005-2009
|
|
Brown County
6
|
505.9 (430.8, 590.6)
|
33
|
2005-2009
|
|
Menard County
6
|
505.1 (454.4, 560.3)
|
76
|
2005-2009
|
|
St. Clair County
6
|
502.9 (490.9, 515.0)
|
1,367
|
2005-2009
|
|
Saline County
6
|
501.0 (467.3, 536.7)
|
173
|
2005-2009
|
|
Douglas County
6
|
501.0 (460.6, 544.1)
|
116
|
2005-2009
|
|
Edwards County
6
|
499.6 (435.1, 571.8)
|
45
|
2005-2009
|
|
Macoupin County
6
|
499.3 (474.3, 525.5)
|
306
|
2005-2009
|
|
Randolph County
6
|
498.3 (467.0, 531.1)
|
193
|
2005-2009
|
|
Champaign County
6
|
497.0 (481.5, 512.9)
|
790
|
2005-2009
|
|
Bureau County
6
|
494.7 (465.4, 525.5)
|
222
|
2005-2009
|
|
Washington County
6
|
494.0 (448.3, 543.3)
|
88
|
2005-2009
|
|
Putnam County
6
|
492.8 (425.0, 569.2)
|
39
|
2005-2009
|
|
Fayette County
6
|
490.8 (452.7, 531.4)
|
125
|
2005-2009
|
|
Madison County
6
|
490.4 (479.2, 501.9)
|
1,466
|
2005-2009
|
|
Rock Island County
6
|
490.1 (475.4, 505.2)
|
865
|
2005-2009
|
|
Effingham County
6
|
490.1 (459.6, 522.2)
|
195
|
2005-2009
|
|
Jefferson County
6
|
489.8 (462.1, 518.8)
|
240
|
2005-2009
|
|
Iroquois County
6
|
489.4 (458.6, 521.8)
|
198
|
2005-2009
|
|
De Witt County
6
|
489.3 (446.5, 535.3)
|
99
|
2005-2009
|
|
Shelby County
6
|
487.8 (451.8, 526.2)
|
143
|
2005-2009
|
|
Clinton County
6
|
487.8 (458.1, 519.0)
|
203
|
2005-2009
|
|
Woodford County
6
|
487.1 (457.6, 518.2)
|
211
|
2005-2009
|
|
Henry County
6
|
484.5 (460.3, 509.8)
|
311
|
2005-2009
|
|
Kendall County
6
|
482.7 (459.3, 507.0)
|
346
|
2005-2009
|
|
Knox County
6
|
481.1 (457.6, 505.5)
|
330
|
2005-2009
|
|
McLean County
6
|
480.9 (464.8, 497.5)
|
686
|
2005-2009
|
|
Cook County
6
|
480.6 (478.0, 483.3)
|
24,814
|
2005-2009
|
|
DeKalb County
6
|
478.3 (457.3, 499.9)
|
401
|
2005-2009
|
|
Jasper County
6
|
477.5 (423.5, 536.9)
|
58
|
2005-2009
|
|
Perry County
6
|
476.2 (439.5, 515.3)
|
127
|
2005-2009
|
|
Wabash County
6
|
475.9 (427.6, 528.4)
|
74
|
2005-2009
|
|
Clark County
6
|
475.7 (434.6, 519.8)
|
102
|
2005-2009
|
|
Lake County
6
|
475.2 (467.5, 483.1)
|
2,993
|
2005-2009
|
|
Monroe County
6
|
475.1 (443.2, 508.8)
|
167
|
2005-2009
|
|
Hancock County
6
|
475.0 (436.9, 515.8)
|
122
|
2005-2009
|
|
Adams County
6
|
475.0 (454.0, 496.8)
|
404
|
2005-2009
|
|
Jackson County
6
|
474.8 (448.5, 502.3)
|
251
|
2005-2009
|
|
Piatt County
6
|
474.7 (432.8, 519.8)
|
98
|
2005-2009
|
|
Kane County
6
|
474.3 (464.6, 484.2)
|
1,924
|
2005-2009
|
|
Pulaski County
6
|
473.2 (406.8, 547.8)
|
37
|
2005-2009
|
|
DuPage County
6
|
472.4 (466.0, 478.9)
|
4,271
|
2005-2009
|
|
Marshall County
6
|
468.1 (423.1, 517.0)
|
83
|
2005-2009
|
|
Hamilton County
6
|
467.7 (411.8, 529.7)
|
53
|
2005-2009
|
|
Boone County
6
|
467.5 (440.7, 495.6)
|
234
|
2005-2009
|
|
Wayne County
6
|
467.3 (426.9, 510.7)
|
104
|
2005-2009
|
|
Cass County
6
|
466.5 (420.0, 517.0)
|
75
|
2005-2009
|
|
Jersey County
6
|
463.2 (426.9, 501.9)
|
123
|
2005-2009
|
|
Winnebago County
6
|
461.5 (450.9, 472.3)
|
1,462
|
2005-2009
|
|
White County
6
|
458.8 (417.3, 503.7)
|
96
|
2005-2009
|
|
Scott County
6
|
455.4 (384.6, 536.3)
|
30
|
2005-2009
|
|
McHenry County
6
|
453.5 (442.4, 464.9)
|
1,308
|
2005-2009
|
|
Mercer County
6
|
453.1 (413.1, 496.3)
|
98
|
2005-2009
|
|
Schuyler County
6
|
450.7 (391.2, 517.5)
|
44
|
2005-2009
|
|
Stark County
6
|
444.7 (381.2, 516.6)
|
38
|
2005-2009
|
|
Carroll County
6
|
443.3 (404.2, 485.5)
|
102
|
2005-2009
|
|
Lawrence County
6
|
443.0 (402.7, 486.5)
|
91
|
2005-2009
|
|
Union County
6
|
439.3 (401.6, 479.9)
|
104
|
2005-2009
|
|
Henderson County
6
|
437.5 (382.7, 499.0)
|
48
|
2005-2009
|
|
Whiteside County
6
|
437.4 (416.2, 459.5)
|
329
|
2005-2009
|
|
Ogle County
6
|
436.9 (413.8, 460.9)
|
273
|
2005-2009
|
|
Warren County
6
|
435.0 (396.0, 477.0)
|
96
|
2005-2009
|
|
Pike County
6
|
418.8 (380.5, 460.1)
|
94
|
2005-2009
|
|
Stephenson County
6
|
418.6 (395.7, 442.6)
|
259
|
2005-2009
|
|
Hardin County
6
|
417.9 (349.3, 497.7)
|
27
|
2005-2009
|
|
Jo Daviess County
6
|
381.3 (350.9, 414.0)
|
124
|
2005-2009
|
|
Pope County
6
|
369.1 (302.2, 448.7)
|
23
|
2005-2009
|
Notes: Created by statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov on 05/24/2013 2:03 am. State Cancer Registries may provide more current or more local data. † Incidence rates (cases per 100,000 population per year) are age-adjusted to the 2000 US standard population (19 age groups: <1, 1-4, 5-9, ... , 80-84, 85+). Rates are for invasive cancer only (except for bladder cancer which is invasive and in situ) or unless otherwise specified. Rates calculated using SEER*Stat. Population counts for denominators are based on Census populations as modified by NCI. The US populations included with the data release have been adjusted for the population shifts due to hurricanes Katrina and Rita for 62 counties and parishes in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. The 1969-2009 US Population Data File is used for SEER and NPCR incidence rates. § Because of the impact on Louisiana's population for the July - December 2005 time period due to Hurricanes Katrina/Rita, SEER excluded Louisiana cases diagnosed for that six month time period. The count has been suppressed due to data consistency issues.
1 Source: CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries Cancer Surveillance System (NPCR-CSS) January 2012 data submission and SEER November 2011 submission.
6 Source: State Cancer Registry and the CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries Cancer Surveillance System (NPCR-CSS) January 2012 data submission. State rates include rates from metropolitan areas funded by SEER.
Interpret Rankings provides insight into interpreting cancer incidence statistics. When the population size for a denominator is small, the rates may be unstable. A rate is unstable when a small change in the numerator (e.g., only one or two additional cases) has a dramatic effect on the calculated rate.
Suppression is used to avoid misinterpretation when rates are unstable.
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