Stark racial inequities in cancer incidence?and mortality spur the need for scientists, clinicians, and policymakers to unite and drive for meaningful change.
The y-axis of this graph has?10-year age ranges, after ages 00 to 19, and up to age 80 and older. The percent change in cancer death rates, from 0 to -70 is on the x-axis.?The numbers are negative because they’re showing a decrease in the death rate, meaning fewer people are dying from cancer in that age group.
The bar graphs show the percent change for the cancer death rate, by age group, for 4 groups of people: Black males, Black females, White males, and White females.?
For ages 0 to 19, listed from highest to lowest decreases in the cancer death rate
White males: -43%, meaning White males had a 43% decrease in the cancer death rate.
Black males: -40%
White females: -26 % change
Black females: -23% change
Black females: -42%
White males: -40%
White females: -37% change
Black males: -34% change
Black males: -51%?
Black females:-43%
White males: -34%
White females: -33%
Black males: -65% change
Black females: -47%
White males: -43%
White females: -41%
Black males: -67%?
Black females: -46%
White males: -46%
White females: -41%
Black males: -51%?
White males: -43%
White females: -34%
Black females:-33%?
Black males: -47%?
White males: -39%
Black females: -28%?
White females: -25%
Black males: -37%?
White males:?-23%
Black females: -20%?
White females: -7%
Black males: -49%?
White males: -36%
Black females:? -33%?
White females: -26%?
Over the last three decades (1991 to 2022), Black males had a 49% decrease in cancer mortality—larger than White males and Black and White females in the United States. Black men had the most improvement in almost every 10-year age group. The largest improvement in the cancer death rate— 65% to 67%—was for Black men ages 40 to 59. Black women had an overall 33% decline in cancer death rate. (White men had a 36% decline and White women had a 26% reduction.)
As the bar graph above shows, Black males (yellow) had much greater improvement in lowering the cancer death rate than White males (green) and both Black females (purple) and White females (orange) except for the youngest ages. (For birth to age 19, White males edged out Black males for the most improvement. For ages 20 to 29, Black women had the greatest improvement.)
Despite these big improvements, Black males (and females) still have a disproportionately high cancer burden.?
The 2025 张译丹不雅视频流出 report , said that racial inequalities in care and outcomes persist for many types of cancers, and these deficits keep death rates high for Black people and survival rates low. For example, the 5-year relative survival rate for almost every type of cancer was lower for Black people compared to White people from 2014 to 2020.
In the study, Black people included African Americans, Caribbean Americans, and recent immigrants of African descent.
For many of the most common cancers, death rates for Black people in the US are also higher than they are for White people. For example: Compared to White men and women, Black men and women have:
The report authors which include 张译丹不雅视频流出 researchers Anatu Saka, MPH, Angela Giaquinto, MSPH, Jessica Star MA, MPH, Rebecca Siegel, MPH, and Ahmedin Jemal, DVM, PhD MPH, emphasized:
Continued documentation of these disparities is necessary but insufficient
to eliminate inequalities. Future efforts must go beyond research to disentangle
the influence of structural racism on health and actively develop mechanisms
to reverse course.
Structural racism is caused by the proliferation and continuation of mutually reinforcing, unfair systems in housing, education, employment, earnings, credit, health care and insurance, and criminal justice.
Overall declines in cancer mortality rates in Black people largely reflect behavioral changes, such as historical declines in cigarette smoking among Black teens, as well as advances in treatment and earlier detection for some cancers. Yet, this population persistently experiences a much higher mortality burden than other racial and ethnic groups for many cancers. We must reverse course.”
The practice of redlining—prejudiced housing policies that denied mortgage loans to credit-worthy applicants—prevented the accumulation of generational wealth and perpetuated a “racial wealth gap that persists today,” the study authors say.
According to the US Census Bureau data, in 2023:
For most cancers, an increase in socioeconomic status decreases the risk of mortality. However, at every?economic level, Black people have a higher cancer mortality than White people.
Areas where redlining used to occur are still areas associated with increased health risks—including cancer diagnoses at later stages when they are harder to treat and higher rates of death from cancer. These health risks persist even if the neighborhood's economic status has risen.
One study, for example, showed that older women with breast cancer living in historically redlined areas were more likely to receive substandard treatment for and die from breast cancer compared with women in other neighborhoods.
People with a lower socioeconomic status are more likely to experience risk factors for cancer including smoking and obesity, as well as barriers to high-quality cancer screening and care.
Tackling these issues, say the study authors, includes “strengthening our health care system through policies that eliminate cost-sharing copays” and “innovative strategies and financial incentives to promote equitable care delivery across the cancer continuum.”?
Steep declines in smoking initiation in Black teens 40 to 50 years ago, especially for boys, contributed to the improvements in cancer death rates for Black people that we see today, particularly the large declines in middle-aged men.
Smoking causes approximately 30% of cancer deaths. The graph below shows that smoking has declined for both Black and White males and females over the last 30 years. But the gap still exists, as Black men continued to have the highest prevalence of smoking over the last 50 years.
Smoking prevalence may be higher in Black men for several reasons: One is that smoking rates are higher among populations with limited incomes because of targeted advertising by tobacco companies.
Today, tobacco companies continue to use targeted marketing in poor neighborhoods—offering discounts and promotions to entice people to start, or keep, smoking.
In 2020, smoking rates were 20% for adults with an annual household income of less than $35,000, compared with overall adult smoking rate of 12.5%.
Smoking causes at least 12 different cancers, including 86% of lung cancers, the leading cause of cancer death for both Black men and women.
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This graph shows the percentage of adult Black and White males and females who smoked in the United States from 1965 to 2023. Since 1965, the smoking prevalence for both racial groups and sexes has significantly declined. By 2023, Black men had the largest decrease for smoking, but still were the most likely to smoke compared to White men and Black and White women. Black women have had the lowest smoking prevalence since 1990. Source:?Slideshow: 2025 Cancer Statistics for African American/Black People
The y-axis on this graph measures prevalence from 0% to 60%, and the x-axis shows time in years, 1965 at the 0 point, then in 10-year intervals from 1970 to 2020. Curves show the prevalence of smoking for 4 groups of people: Black men, Black women, White men, and White women.?
In 1965, the?smoking?prevalence of Black males was just under 60%, and in 2023, the prevalence was less than 20%.?
Consistent?declines in smoking prevalence occurred across these years:
From 2010 to 2020, there were small increases and decreases in smoking prevalence for Black males:?
In 1965, the?smoking?prevalence of White males was 50%, and in 2023, the prevalence was about 13%.
Consistent?declines in smoking prevalence occurred across these years:?
In 1965, the smoking prevalence for White females was about 34%, and in 2023, it was about 11%.?
Consistent declines in smoking prevalence for White females occurred across the years, but they were more moderate/less sharp compared to decreases in male prevalence.
From 2010 to 2023, there were small increases and decreases in smoking prevalence as part of the decline from 23% to about 15%. In 2014, there was a slight increase to 19%, but by 2023, the prevalence rate had decreased to 13%.?
In 1965, the smoking prevalence for Black females was about 32%, and in 2023, it had declined to 9%.?
There were sharp up-and-down cycles of smoking prevalence from 1965 to about 1990, sometimes rising above the prevalence for White females.?
From 1965 to about 1974, prevalence rose from 32% to 36%.
From 1974 to 1979, prevalence declined from 36% to 31%.
From 1979 to about 1985, prevalence remained steady at 31%.
From 1985 to 1990, prevalence dropped from 31% to 21%, where it leveled off until almost 2000.
From 2000 to 2001 prevalence declined from 21% to 18%, where it stayed until 2011, when it declined to about 15%.
From 2010 to 2023, the prevalence had blips up and down. From 2020 to 2022, the rate increased from 10% to about 11% but was back to 9% in 2023.
Black women have a 57% prevalence of obesity, compared to 40% for White women.
As with smoking, a high prevalence of obesity is more likely in people with a low socioeconomic status. Low-income neighborhoods are less likely to have access to fresh and healthy food and areas for safe outdoor physical activity. Those barriers contribute to an increased risk of developing obesity-related types of cancer.
Obesity is associated with an increased risk of many cancers and may contribute to higher incidence and mortality rates in Black women than in White women for cancers of the stomach, pancreas, liver, kidney, colorectum, and uterine corpus (endometrial cancer), as well as myeloma.
Excess body weight is the only known modifiable risk factor for myeloma. Myeloma incidence is about 20% higher in adults who have overweight or obesity.
This graph shows how the prevalence of obesity has changed across time from 1976 to 2020 for Black and White males and females. The pink curve clearly shows that Black females have consistently had a much higher prevalence of obesity than White women and Black and White men.?Source:?Slideshow: 2025 Cancer Statistics for African American/Black People
This graph shows the prevalence of obesity in percentage on the y-axis and the years from 1976 to 2020 on the x-axis. Four plotted lines/curves compare obesity prevalence for Black and White males and Black and White females.
The curve showing the prevalence of obesity in Black women is well above the other prevalence lines, starting at 31% in 1976 to 1980 and rising to almost 60% by 2017 to March 2020.
The prevalence of obesity for White women started at 15% in 1976 to 1980 and didn’t reach the 30% starting point for Black women for almost 25 years, from around 1999 to 2002. Prevalence leveled off until 2007, when it steadily increased to 40% by 2020.
The prevalence of obesity between Black and White men has shifted over time. Black males had a slightly higher prevalence of obesity (17%) than White males (12%) from 1976 to 1980 to 21% in both Black and White men from 1988 to 1994. At that point, the prevalence between the two races was about the same and stayed at about the same level of increase from 21% to 28% from 1999 to 2002.
Then, the prevalence of obesity in Black men surged to 36%, with the prevalence for White men rising and holding at 33% until 2015 to 2016. That racial gap in obesity prevalence remained for about 15 years.
From 2015 to 2020, the prevalence of obesity started rising and continued to rise in Black men, from 38% to 42%, with a steeper, more rapid increase for White males, from 39% to 44%.
As described above, the decline in cancer death rates for Black males is largely due to reductions in the prevalence of smoking. Still, the death rate for specific cancers—like prostate cancer, the most common cancer in men—is much higher for Black males compared to White males.
Prostate cancer. Black men have the highest prostate cancer death rate of any racial or ethnic group in the US?during 2018 to 2022—more than 2 times higher than White men.
A primary reason is suboptimal treatment—even when care is provided through an equal-access health system. A found that Black men were 11% less likely than other men to receive definitive treatment for prostate cancer.
Colorectal cancer. Black men and women have the second highest incidence of colorectal cancer in the US, after American Indian and Alaska Native people.
Compared with White men, incidence rates for colorectal cancer were 20% higher in Black men from 2017 to 2021. Death rates from colorectal cancer are 40% higher in Black men compared with white men.
One reason for both these disparities is because smoking is more common in Black men. Smoking also makes healing after treatment more difficult.
Other factors that increase the risk of developing colorectal cancer include:?
The 5-year survival rate for colorectal cancer is 59% in Black people compared to 65% in White people. Numerous studies have shown that Black people with colorectal cancer are less likely than White people to receive recommended surgical treatment, radiation, and chemotherapy. Plus, Black people are more likely to have treatment delays than White people, even when the racial groups have similar socioeconomic backgrounds.
Lung cancer. Lung is the second most common cancer in both Black men and women and is the leading cause of cancer death among Black men and Women combined.
As discussed above,?both incidence and death rates have declined more in Black men compared with White men due to the sharper reduction in tobacco use.
Although early diagnosis improves lung cancer survival dramatically, only 17% of eligible Black people (ages 20 to 79) and 14% of eligible White people are being screened with low-dose computed tomography based on the guidelines.
The left graph shows the cancer incidence rate for Black men every 5 years from 1995 to 2020 for 5 of the most common cancers in males, in order from highest to lowest incidence: prostate, lung and bronchus, colorectum, myeloma, and stomach. The right graph shows the same information for Black women for 5 of the most common cancers in females, in order from highest to lowest incidence: breast, lung and bronchus, colorectum, uterine corpus (endometrial), myeloma, uterine cervix, and stomach. Source:?Slideshow: 2025 Cancer Statistics for African American/Black People
The graph showing trends in cancer incidence rates for Black men shows the incidence rate per 100,000 Black men on the y-axis and the year of diagnosis from 1995 to 2021 on the x-axis. Curves show incidence across time for the most common cancers in Black men (in order of prevalence): prostate, lung and bronchus, colorectum, myeloma, and stomach.
The prevalence of prostate cancer in Black men was consistently much higher than all the other types of cancer shown on this graph. In 1995, the incidence rate for prostate cancer was about 273 cases per every 100,000 Black men, and in 2021, there were about 209 cases out of every 100,000 Black men.
The incidence rate for prostate cancer also had more fluctuations compared with other cancer types. The fluctuations reflect changes in guidelines for PSA screening tests.
The incidence rate for lung and bronchus cancers in Black men was about 138 cases per every 100,000 Black men in 1995 with a consistent decline to about 65 cases per every 100,000 Black men in 2021.
The incidence rate for colon and rectal cancers in Black men was about 74 cases per 100,000 in 1995 with a slow decline to about 48 cases of colon and rectum cancers per every 100,000 Black men in 2021.
This was the only cancer shown in the graphic with an increasing incidence rate during the time studied. The incidence rate for myeloma in Black men slowly increased from about 14 cases per every 100,000 Black men in 1995 to about 19 cases per every 100,000 Black men in 2021.
The incidence rate for stomach cancer in Black men was about 20 cases per every 100,000 Black men in 1995 with a slow decline to about 14 cases of stomach cancer per every 100,000 Black men in 2021.
The graph showing trends in cancer incidence rates for Black women shows the incidence rate per 100,000 Black women on the y-axis and the year of diagnosis from 1995 to 2021 on the x-axis. Curves show incidence across time for the most common cancers in Black women (in order of prevalence): breast, lung and bronchus, colorectum, uterine corpus (endometrial cancer), uterine cervix (cervical cancer), myeloma, and stomach cancer.
The changes in incidence rate over time were much less dramatic for Black females than Black males.
The incidence rate of breast cancer is consistently much higher for Black women than the other types of cancer graphed. The breast cancer incidence rate for Black women has slowly risen over the years. In 1995, it was about 117 cases per every 100,000 Black women, and in 2021, it was about 137 cases per?every 100,000 Black women.
The incidence rate for lung and bronchus cancers in Black women has remained steady at around 51 cases per every 100,000 Black women. In 2021, the incidence rate was a bit lower at about 43 cases per every 100,000 Black women.
The incidence rate for endometrial cancer for Black women has slowly risen over the years from about 19 cases per every 100,000 women in 1995 to about 32 cases per every 100,000 Black women in 2021.
Incidence rates for cervical cancer have slowly declined for Black women, from about 18 cases per every 100,000 Black women in 1995 to about 8 cases per every 100,000 Black women in 2021.
Compared to White women, Black women have a 10% higher rate of cancer death despite a 9% lower incidence rate.
Breast cancer. Black women have a 38% higher risk of dying from breast cancer, compared to White women, even though Black women have a 5% lower likelihood of being diagnosed with breast cancer. The causes for this disparity include:
Lung cancer. Black and White women had similar lung cancer mortality until the early 1990s. Then, from 2018 to 2022, Black women had a 16% lower death rate than White women. This is largely because of the consistently lower smoking rates for Black women.
Colorectal cancer. Compared with White women, incidence rates for colorectal cancer were 14% higher in Black women. One reason for this disparity is that having obesity increases the risk of developing colorectal cancer, and Black women have a high rate of obesity. Death rates for colorectal cancer are 25% higher in Black women compared to White women.
Uterine corpus (endometrial cancer). The incidence rate for endometrial cancer is about the same for Black and White women—about 28 cases per every 100,000 women. Recent increases are linked with increases in body weight. Black women are twice as likely to die from endometrial cancer compared to White women.
The Black-White disparity in 5-year survival rates is among the largest for endometrial cancer, with Black women having 63% survival compared with 84% in White women. Some of the reasons for this difference are:
Cervical cancer. In the 1960s and 1970s, women started getting screened for cervical cancer, and that led to decreases in incidence and death rates for Black and White women. From 2012 to 2021, cervical cancer incidence continued to decline in Black women by about 1% a year while incidence stabilized in White women.
One reason for the decline is the high rate of HPV vaccination for Black adolescents: 69% of Black girls were up-to-date with recommended vaccinations and 62% of Black boys were, compared with 63% of White girls and 57% of White boys.
Still, Black women have a 53% higher risk of dying from cervical cancer compared to White females.
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