The five year survival rate of all cancers in China is 30.9 per cent - compared to the 66 per cent rate in the US, Hong Kong based South China Morning Post quoted the study results as saying.
Researchers analysed nearly 140,000 patients from across the country who were diagnosed with cancer between 2003 and 2005.
The study, which began in 2011, was conducted by experts from the National Office for Cancer Prevention and Control and National Central Cancer Registry.
Results showed that breast cancer had the highest survival rate at 73 per cent.
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Cancers of the stomach and oesophagus, among the most common, had survival rates of just 27.4 per cent and 20.9 per cent respectively.
The survival rate of lung and liver cancer was even lower, at 16.1 per cent and 10.1 per cent respectively.
The survival rate for women was generally higher than for men, according to the research. Rural patients have a survival rate for all cancers as low as 21.8 per cent, half that of their urban counterparts, 39.5 per cent.
The prevalence of all types of cancer on the mainland was 285.91 cases for every 100,000 people in 2009 - a rate which has doubled over the past two decades.
The death rate from cancer was 180.54 per 100,000 people, much higher than in the 1980s, according to a 2012 report.
Dr Chen Wanqing, deputy director of the National Office for Cancer Prevention, said investigation of cancer survival rates, along with studying cancer prevalence and mortality, was an important part of researching the impact of cancer.
Chen said each country has a different pool of cancers, leading to different general cancer survival rate.
"A high proportion of US patients have prostate cancer or breast cancer, both of which have good results after treatment. So the cancer survival rate [of the US] is relatively high, he said.
But on the mainland, the survival of the patients with these two kinds of diseases is lower because of many of them are at a late stage when they receive treatment.