Cancer  /  Future Economic Burden

In 2015, more than 1.6 million new cases of cancer are expected to be diagnosed and close to 600,000 people will die from the disease. Thankfully, major breakthroughs are changing how we prevent, treat, and cure cancer. Treatments are becoming increasingly personalized and advances in immuno-oncology, a field that uses the body’s own immune system to fight cancer, are causing a paradigm shift in cancer treatment. Use the navigation below and the search feature to view the data and to narrow down your search.

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    • The total cost of cancer in the U.S. is projected to increase from $290 billion in 2010 to $458 billion in 2030.  
    • The value of life lost from cancer deaths is projected to reach $147.6 billion in 2020.  
    • Cost of Cancer Care by Phase of Care, All Sites, All Ages, Male and Female, in 2010 Dollars  
    • The total cost of cancer in the U.S. is projected to increase from $290 billion in 2010 to $458 billion in 2030.  
    • Prostate cancer cost in 2020 is estimated to have a 42 percent increase from 2010.  
    • Breast cancer cost in 2020 is forecased to have a 32 percent increase from 2010.  
    • Costs for cancer therapy, which reached $104 billion in 2006, are now projected to rise to $173 billion in 2020.  
    • Cost of Cancer Care by Phase of Care, All Sites, All Ages, Male and Female, In 2010 Dollars  
    • The cost of cancer is projected to reach at least $158 billion (in 2010 dollars) in the year 2020–an increase of 27% from 2010.  If newly developed tools for cancer…  
    • The National Institutes of Health estimates overall costs of cancer in 2008 at $228.1 billion–$93.2 billion for direct medical costs (total of all health expenditures); $18.8 billion for indirect morbidity…