CHICAGO – One of the more eye-opening data rollouts at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) involved an analysis of registry data from a California hospital system showing that women with head and neck cancer were, compared to men, less likely to receive intensive chemotherapy (35 percent vs. 46 percent) and radiation (60 percent vs. 70 percent) relative to men. But, controlling for age and other serious medical conditions, a mathematical model demonstrated that the ratio of cancer to noncancer mortality was two times higher for women than the ratio for men.