Colorectal Cancer Demographics Shift Toward Younger Americans: Research
Rectal and distal colon cancers now account for nearly one-third of cases, with colorectal cancer diagnoses rising 3% annually in adults under 50, American Cancer Society reports.
- The American Cancer Society released its findings Monday showing colorectal cancer diagnoses shifting toward people under 65, with 45% of new cases and rising rectal cancers driving the trend.
- In 2021 the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force cut the screening age to 45, but just more than a third of people ages 45 to 49 are getting screened despite previous guidance at age 50.
- Incidence rose about 3% annually for people ages 20 to 49, with many cancers diagnosed after a 4- to 6-month delay, said Andreana Holowatyj.
- Clinicians are considering fast-tracking symptomatic patients under age 45 to avoid referral loops that delay diagnosis and treatment, while doctors urge earlier education about colorectal cancer.
- Projections show a heavy near-term burden that informs prevention priorities as researchers link more than half of colorectal cancers to controllable risk factors and forecast 158,850 new cases and 55,230 deaths in 2026.
11 Articles
11 Articles
Colorectal Cancer Now Looks Like a Generational Problem
Colorectal cancer, the type that killed James Van Der Beek at 48, is lately looking a lot less like "Grandpa's disease." A new American Cancer Society analysis finds that nearly half (45%) of new colorectal cancer cases are now diagnosed in adults younger than 65, as rates continue to fall...
Colorectal cancer demographics shift toward younger Americans: Research
The rate of colorectal cancer is increasing among younger Americans and is now the leading cause of cancer deaths in adults under the age of 50, according to research published by the American Cancer Society on Monday. Researchers found that 45 percent of new colorectal cancer diagnoses are occurring in individuals younger than 65, a…
Rectal cancer incidence rising after decades of decline as colorectal cancer shifts toward younger generations
Colorectal cancer rates in the United States are moving in two very different directions, according to a new report released today from the American Cancer Society (ACS). While the disease continues to decline among older adults, rates are rising in people under 65, particularly among younger adults, signaling a troubling shift in who is being affected.
Nearly 45 Percent of Colorectal Cancers in US Occur Among People Under 65, Study Warns
More than four in 10 colorectal cancer (CRC) cases in the United States are now occurring among people below the age of 65, according to a March 2 peer-reviewed study published in an American Cancer Society journal. CRC refers to cancers that start in the colon or the rectum. It is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer in men and women, and the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. Researchers analyzed data of CRC…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 64% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium










