Extract

Cumulative risk of cancer incidence of uterine cervix (ICD-10: C53) and uterine body (ICD-10: C54) to age 69 was calculated with data from Cancer Incidence in Five Continents Vol. VIII (1). Cumulative risk is defined as the probability that an individual will develop the disease in question during a certain age span, in the absence of other competing causes of death. The comparisons of the cumulative incidence risk of cancer of uterine cervix among 22 registries (and ethnic groups) are shown in Fig. 1. Koreans in Seoul showed the highest risk among all the registries. Korean immigrants in Los Angeles showed the highest risk in the USA registries. Denmark showed a relatively higher risk than other European registries. Japanese and Korean immigrants in USA showed lower risk than their counterparts in homelands. In USA, black showed higher risk than white.

The comparisons of the cumulative incidence risk of cancer of uterine body are shown in Fig. 2. There is a general tendency that people living in East Asia show lower risk than black and white people in USA and Europeans. Japanese and Chinese immigrants in Hawaii showed higher risk than their counterparts in homelands. In USA, white showed higher risk than black, and Japanese immigrants showed as high risk as white.

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