There’s a new leading cause of cancer death among people under 50, study finds
Colorectal cancer deaths among U.S. adults under 50 rose 1% annually since 2005, becoming the leading cause despite overall cancer death rates dropping 44%, study finds.
- On Thursday, a JAMA study found colorectal cancer is now the leading cause of cancer deaths among people younger than 50 in the United States.
- Researchers led by Rebecca Siegel analyzed National Cancer Institute data from nearly 1.3 million deaths under age 50 and found cancer death rates fell 44% despite rising colorectal deaths.
- Analyzing trends, the study found colorectal cancer deaths increased a little over 1% annually between 1990 and 2023, the only cause to rise while lung, leukemia, and breast cancer deaths declined.
- Experts urge people 45–49 to get screened as only 37% of adults ages 45 to 49 are up-to-date and half of under-50 diagnoses occur in this group.
- Amid unclear causes, researchers call for more study as MD Anderson's Dr. Y. Nancy You called the findings `timely` and a `red flag`, urging to `double down` on work to pinpoint causes.
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80 Articles
The colon cancer is officially the most deadly form of cancer for people under 50 years of age in the United States. It is a change that has occurred faster than researchers expected in the area of cancer.
Cancer deaths are declining for those under 50 — except for colorectal cancer
Overall cancer mortality in those younger than 50 years old in the United States is decreasing — although there has been an increase in deaths from colorectal cancer. It is now the leading cause of cancer deaths in that population. According to a study published in JAMA, cancer deaths in the under-50 crowd decreased in total by 44%, — from 25.5 per 100,000 people in 1990 to 14.2 in 2023. Colorectal cancer deaths, though, have gone up by 1.1% per…
Colorectal cancer has traditionally been considered a disease of the elderly, with an average age of diagnosis close to 70. However, this reality is changing, which has raised alarms. And it is not for less. Its incidence in adults under 50 years of age has doubled in the last two decades in various countries around the world and is now the most lethal tumor among Americans in this age group. Thus, it has gone from the fifth most common cause of…
Why are so many younger Americans getting and dying of colorectal cancer?
fstop123/Getty Images (NEW YORK) — Colorectal cancer was once viewed as being mostly diagnosed among middle-age and older adults, but that’s changing. Research shows more adults in their 20s, 30s and 40s are being diagnosed with colorectal cancer, with incidence increasing over the last three decades. Deaths are on the rise too, with a recent study finding colorectal cancer is now the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in men — and second in…
This was determined by a study that found that the death rates for colorectal cancer in this age group increased by 1% each year since 2005.This increase contrasts with the overall cancer figures for this age group, whose mortality rates have decreased by 44% since 1990.Of the five most common causes of cancer-related death in people under the age of 50, deaths from colorectal cancer were the only ones that increased.Although most cases of color…
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