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Incidence Rates Table

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Incidence Rate Report by State

Breast (Late Stage^), 2015-2019

All Races (includes Hispanic), Female, All Ages

Sorted by Percentlate
State
 sort alphabetically by name ascending
Age-Adjusted Incidence Rate
cases per 100,000
(95% Confidence Interval)
 sort by rate descending
CI*Rank⋔
(95% Confidence Interval)
 sort by CI rank descending
Average Annual Count
 sort by count descending
Percent of Cases with Late Stage
 sort by percent late descending
US (SEER+NPCR) 1 41.6 (41.5, 41.7) N/A 79,720 31.4
Massachusetts 3 36.2 (35.4, 37.1) 49 (45, 50) 1,522 25.3
Rhode Island 6 39.6 (37.4, 42.0) 41 (16, 48) 263 26.6
Vermont 6 37.3 (34.6, 40.3) 48 (25, 50) 151 26.6
Hawaii 3 40.8 (38.8, 42.9) 36 (10, 46) 348 27.8
Connecticut 3 41.0 (39.8, 42.3) 34 (17, 43) 933 28.0
New Hampshire 6 41.7 (39.7, 43.7) 24 (6, 44) 366 28.2
South Dakota 6 37.6 (35.1, 40.2) 47 (27, 50) 186 28.8
Maine 6 38.9 (37.0, 40.9) 43 (24, 49) 358 28.9
Minnesota 6 41.4 (40.3, 42.4) 31 (16, 41) 1,326 29.2
Arizona 6 35.2 (34.3, 36.0) 50 (47, 50) 1,473 29.4
Montana 6 43.0 (40.6, 45.5) 18 (2, 42) 274 29.8
Oregon 6 41.1 (40.0, 42.3) 33 (17, 43) 1,039 30.0
Washington 5 41.5 (40.7, 42.4) 28 (16, 39) 1,769 30.0
Delaware 6 43.2 (40.7, 45.7) 14 (2, 42) 265 30.1
New York 3 42.1 (41.5, 42.6) 21 (15, 31) 5,057 30.1
Kansas 6 41.7 (40.2, 43.1) 23 (11, 42) 698 30.3
Iowa 3 43.1 (41.8, 44.6) 15 (4, 33) 805 30.6
New Jersey 3 43.7 (42.9, 44.5) 12 (5, 21) 2,423 30.6
Wisconsin 6 43.1 (42.1, 44.1) 16 (5, 28) 1,502 30.6
Nebraska 6 42.0 (40.2, 43.9) 22 (5, 42) 452 30.7
North Carolina 6 44.4 (43.6, 45.1) 7 (3, 16) 2,791 31.0
North Dakota 6 43.6 (40.6, 46.7) 13 (1, 43) 176 31.0
Pennsylvania 6 42.8 (42.1, 43.4) 19 (10, 26) 3,497 31.0
Indiana 6 40.0 (39.1, 40.9) 40 (28, 45) 1,588 31.2
Michigan 6 40.3 (39.6, 41.1) 38 (26, 43) 2,479 31.2
Alabama 6 39.6 (38.5, 40.6) 42 (30, 46) 1,216 31.4
Kentucky 3 41.6 (40.5, 42.7) 26 (14, 41) 1,136 31.4
New Mexico 3 37.8 (36.2, 39.4) 46 (37, 49) 475 31.4
Virginia 6 40.8 (40.0, 41.6) 35 (22, 42) 2,059 31.4
Tennessee 6 40.5 (39.6, 41.4) 37 (23, 43) 1,665 31.5
Colorado 6 42.3 (41.3, 43.4) 20 (10, 36) 1,311 31.6
Arkansas 6 40.3 (38.9, 41.7) 39 (20, 45) 736 31.8
Florida 6 41.4 (40.9, 41.9) 30 (21, 37) 5,671 31.8
Missouri 6 43.7 (42.7, 44.7) 10 (4, 22) 1,629 31.9
Texas 3 37.8 (37.4, 38.3) 44 (42, 48) 5,619 31.9
South Carolina 6 43.8 (42.7, 44.9) 9 (4, 23) 1,387 32.1
Maryland 6 44.2 (43.2, 45.2) 8 (3, 19) 1,625 32.2
Ohio 6 43.7 (43.0, 44.4) 11 (5, 20) 3,175 32.2
West Virginia 6 41.3 (39.6, 43.1) 32 (9, 44) 497 32.3
Illinois 3 44.6 (43.9, 45.3) 5 (3, 14) 3,396 32.4
Wyoming 6 37.8 (34.8, 41.0) 45 (19, 50) 127 32.5
California 3 41.4 (41.1, 41.8) 29 (21, 35) 9,115 32.9
Idaho 3 44.4 (42.5, 46.4) 6 (1, 29) 425 33.1
Oklahoma 6 43.0 (41.7, 44.3) 17 (5, 33) 983 33.5
Alaska 6 41.6 (38.6, 44.9) 25 (3, 47) 149 33.6
Puerto Rico 6 34.6 (33.4, 35.8) N/A 708 33.9
District of Columbia 6 46.2 (43.0, 49.5) 3 (1, 32) 168 34.0
Georgia 3 46.7 (45.9, 47.5) 2 (1, 5) 2,796 35.5
Utah 3 41.5 (40.0, 43.1) 27 (10, 43) 577 35.5
Louisiana 3 46.8 (45.6, 48.0) 1 (1, 6) 1,295 35.6
Mississippi 6 46.1 (44.6, 47.5) 4 (1, 11) 831 36.4
Nevada 6
data not available
N/A
data not available
data not available
Notes:
Created by statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov on 06/02/2023 8:17 am.

State Cancer Registries may provide more current or more local data.
Trend
Rising when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is above 0.
Stable when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change includes 0.
Falling when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is below 0.

⋔ Results presented with the CI*Rank statistics help show the usefulness of ranks. For example, ranks for relatively rare diseases or less populated areas may be essentially meaningless because of their large variability, but ranks for more common diseases in densely populated regions can be very useful. More information about methodology can be found on the CI*Rank website.

† 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 Population Data File is used for SEER and NPCR incidence rates.

Rates are computed using cancers classified as malignant based on ICD-O-3. For more information see malignant.html.

^ Late Stage is defined as cases determined to be regional or distant. Due to changes in stage coding, Combined Summary Stage (2004+) is used for data from Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) databases and Merged Summary Stage is used for data from National Program of Cancer Registries databases. Due to the increased complexity with staging, other staging variables maybe used if necessary.
Data not available for this combination of data selections.

1 Source: National Program of Cancer Registries and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results SEER*Stat Database (2001-2019) - United States Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Cancer Institute. Based on the 2021 submission.
3 Source: SEER November 2021 submission. State Cancer Registry also receives funding from CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries.
5 Source: National Program of Cancer Registries and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results SEER*Stat Database (2001-2019) - United States Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Cancer Institute. Based on the 2021 submission.
6 Source: National Program of Cancer Registries SEER*Stat Database (2001-2019) - United States Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (based on the 2021 submission).

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.

Data not available for this combination of geography, cancer site, age, and race/ethnicity.

Data for the United States does not include data from Nevada.
Data for the United States does not include Puerto Rico.
CI*Rank data for Puerto Rico is not available.

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