Breast cancer - UK mortality statistics

This page contains breast cancer mortality statistics by  sex age and trends over time.

 

Breast cancer mortality statistics by sex

In the UK in 2007 there were 12,082 deaths from breast cancer; 11,990 (99%) of these were in women and 92 (1%) were in men 1-3. Breast cancer accounts for around 16% of female deaths from cancer in the UK and was the most common cause of death from cancer in women until 1998; since then there have been more deaths from lung cancer.

The number of deaths from breast cancer and the mortality rates for the constituent countries of the UK are shown in Table 2.11-3.

Table showing the number of deaths and mortality rates for breast cancer in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and the UK.

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Breast cancer mortality statistics by age

The number of deaths and age-specific mortality rates for female breast cancer are shown in Figure 2.1.

Chart showing breast cancer deaths and mortality rates by age at death

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In younger women aged 35-54 years, breast cancer is the most common cause of all deaths from cancer.

 

Trends in breast cancer mortality

Breast cancer mortality rates in the UK have fallen dramatically since 1989 when 15,625 women died from the disease compared with 11,990 in 2007. Over the same period the breast cancer age-standardised death rates have fallen by 36% from 42 to 27 per 100,000 women, Figure 2.24.

Chart showing the breast cancer mortality trend since the 1970s

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The age-standardised mortality rate for female breast cancer in all of the constituent countries of the UK increased until the late 1980s and then rapidly fell. Breast cancer mortality has declined in all age groups since the late 1980s ( Figure 2.3) 1-4.

Between 1989 and 2007 the breast cancer mortality rate fell by 41% in women aged 40-49 years; by 41% in women aged 50-64; by 38% in women aged 65-69; by 35% in women aged 15-39; and by 20% in women over 70.

Chart showing breast cancer mortality rates by age at death

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The reduction in breast cancer mortality rates is likely to have several different causes including screening, increasing specialisation of care and the widespread adoption of tamoxifen treatment since 1992.

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References for breast cancer mortality