NCI National Cancer Institute www.cancer.gov U.S. National Institutes of Health

DevCan - Probability of Developing or Dying of Cancer

Statistical models are used to compute the probability of developing and dying of cancer from birth or conditional on a certain age. DevCan takes cross-sectional counts of incident cases from the standard areas of the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program conducted by the National Cancer Institute, and mortality counts for the same areas from data collected by the National Center for Health Statistics, and uses them to calculate incidence and mortality rates using population estimates from census data for these areas. These rates are converted to the probabilities of developing or dying from cancer for a hypothetical population. Please note that when the program refers to cancer or incidence, it is referring only to the cancer site that you requested.

DevCan 6.4.1 is the current version of the software (released July 2009). It supports rate editing, sensitivity analysis, user-defined databases, confidence intervals, and the ability to get risk estimates from any age to any age. All revisions made for the current release of the software are listed in readme.txt. The methods section provides information about the methods used in DevCan including a comparison to methods used in previous versions.

This version of DevCan includes the following two incidence databases with matching US mortality data, and a US mortality database for calculating probability of dying:

Additional Devcan databases are available as downloadable Devcan databases.

Statistics related to lifetime risks are available from a variety of sources and there are several tools available for finding or calculating statistics. For help finding the right tool, see What research tool should I use? or choose a method from the list below.

Last Updated: 18 Aug 2009

Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences National Cancer Institute Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health USA.gov