HPV-Associated Cancers Rates by Race and Ethnicity
The rate of people getting HPV-associated cancers varies by race and ethnicity.
"Incidence rate" means how many people out of a given number get the disease each year. Incidence rates of HPV-associated cancers varied by sex and race or ethnic group.*
- Overall, Asian and Pacific Islander men and women had lower rates of HPV-associated cancers than white men and women.
- Black and Hispanic women had higher rates of HPV-associated cervical cancer than white women.
- Black women also had higher rates of HPV-associated vaginal cancer.
- Males had higher rates of HPV-associated oropharyneal cancer than females. Oropharyngeal cancer was most common among white and black men and women, and less common among Asian and Pacific Islander and American Indian/Alaska Native men and women.
- Hispanic men had higher rates of HPV-associated penile cancer than non-Hispanic men.
*Note: This study used cancer registry data to estimate the amount of potentially HPV-associated cancer in the United States by examining cancer in parts of the body and cancer cell types that are more likely to be caused by HPV. Cancer registries do not collect data on the presence or absence of HPV in cancer tissue at the time of diagnosis.
For detail on individual cancers, see topics on the left.
References
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Human papillomavirus–associated cancers—United States, 2004–2008. MMWR 2012;61(15):258–261.
Assessing the burden of HPV-associated cancers in the United States (ABHACUS). Cancer2008;113(S10).
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