Colorectal tumors have become 500 PERCENT more common in young people

  • Colorectal cancer has more than tripled among teens in over two decades
  • It is no longer just a disease of the elderly population, the researchers said
  • READ MORE: Mother diagnosed with world’s deadliest cancer years in advance

Colorectal cancers have risen by up to six-fold in some young age groups since 2000, research shows.

Doctors say the cancers are likely being missed because routine screening in America is only recommended every ten years beginning at age 45.

The average age of colon cancer patients has been getting younger in recent decades in a trend linked to junk food, obesity and toxic chemicals.

Now, a new analysis has broken down the rise in the most granular detail yet using CDC data.

Researchers from the University of Missouri-Kansas City found the rate of colorectal cancers grew 500 percent among children ages 10 to 14 and 333 percent among teens aged 15 to 19.

‘Colorectal cancer is no longer considered just a disease of the elderly population,’ said lead researcher Dr Islam Mohamed, an internal medicine resident physician at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.

The researchers looked at rates of colorectal cancer in children and adults aged 10 to 44, and found that cases had risen in all age groups.

‘It means that there is a trend,’ Dr Mohamed told NBC. ‘We don’t know what to make of it yet, it could be lifestyle factors or genetics, but there is a trend.’

While cases have shot up, the overall number of cases in people below 40 is still low, and cases in under 30s remain rare.

For example, in 2020, the American Cancer Society estimated there were just 17,930 colorectal cancer cases in Americans under the age of 50.

As for the rate of cases, in 2020, only 0.6 children ages 10 to 14 per 100,000 population were diagnosed with colorectal cancer compared to 0.1 per 100,000 in 1999.

Diagnoses in teens age 15 to 19 went from 0.3 to 1.3 per 100,000, and in young adults ages 20 to 24, cases rose from 0.7 to two per 100,000.

Escalations were also found in older adults, with rates rising by 71 percent to 6.5 per 100,000 people in aged 30 to 34 and by 58 percent to 11.7 per 100,000 in ages 35 to 39 in 2020.

While the 40-to-44 age group had a lower percentage increase of 37 percent, the group had the highest incidence rate, reaching 20 per 100,000 people in 2020.

Incidence rate is the number of new cases of a disease divided by the number of persons at risk for the disease.

When rates are low to start with, any increase can be significant.

‘When you are starting off with a very rare disease in 15-year-olds and you add a couple cases, you are going to have a huge percentage increase,’ Dr Folasade May, an associate professor of medicine in the University of California, Los Angeles Vatche and Tamar Manoukian Division of Digestive Diseases, told NBC.

colorectal tumors have become 500 percent more common in young people

Erin Verscheure was 18 when she was diagnosed with stage four colorectal cancer. It was 2016 and she had just graduated high school when she noticed blood in her stool

colorectal tumors have become 500 percent more common in young people

Ms Verscheure had a bowel resection, which is an operation to remove part of the small intestine, large intestine or both, followed by 12 rounds of chemotherapy. In August 2017, she was told she was in remission

colorectal tumors have become 500 percent more common in young people

Evan White, from Dallas and the eldest of three children, was diagnosed with stage three colon cancer at the age of 24 after going into hospital to get an abscess removed from his tonsils. He is pictured above at Christmas with his then puppy, a Bernese Mountain Dog, named Lola

Dr May added that while the overall increases are worrying, it is reassuring to see that the oldest age group had the smallest percentage increase, because 40-44 year olds had the biggest number of cases to begin with.

One such teen is Erin Verscheure, who was 18 when she was diagnosed with stage four colorectal cancer.

It was 2016 and she had just graduated high school when she noticed blood in her stool.

‘I honestly did not know that colorectal cancer was a real thing, so I never did any research about it and was diagnosed very quickly,’ she said.

One day the toilet was completely full of blood which left her ‘pretty concerned’, so she went to the doctors to get her blood work done.

‘I could not believe that this had become my life. I was supposed to be a newly graduated 18 year old, I had this whole new world ahead of me. But the hospital stays and chemo chair consumed me and took part of my life away.’

Originally, doctors told her it was just a bad case of salmonella that would go away on its own, but then decided she should see a specialist for a colonoscopy, after which she was diagnosed with the disease.

She had a bowel resection, which is an operation to remove part of the small intestine, large intestine or both, followed by 12 rounds of chemotherapy.

In August 2017, she was told she was in remission.

Meanwhile, Evan White, 24, from Dallas, had just graduated from the University of Arkansas with a degree in finance when he was diagnosed with colon cancer after dismissing his main symptom – tiredness – for months.

The tumor was not spotted until it had progressed to stage three, meaning it had spread outside the colon, making it much harder to treat.

Mr White had been on track to marry his girlfriend and move to California, but his dreams were cut short when he died after a four-year battle with the disease.

Experts are not sure what’s behind the unprecedented rise, and are exploring whether modern diets, antibiotics or even fungal infections could be at play.

Colorectal cancer normally begins as a small growth, called a polyp, on the inner lining of the colon or rectum — part of the large intestine.

Over time, the cells in these polyps can start to divide uncontrollably, triggering the cancer.

It often doesn’t cause any or very few symptoms in the early stages, which is why doctors say everyone aged 45 and over should get screened for the cancer once a decade. It is also possible to get screened at an early age after talking to doctors.

Early warning signs of the disease can include a change in bowel habits, blood in feces, unexplained weight loss and sudden fatigue or weakness — brought on by blood loss.

If caught in the early stages, before it spreads to other areas, the charity Fight Colorectal Cancer says nine in ten patients will live beyond five years after their diagnosis.

But should the cancer not be detected until stage three, the five-year survival rate drops to 71 percent. At stage four, just 14 percent of patients live for another five years.

Read more

OTHER NEWS

12 minutes ago

Copper Surges to Record High on Bets of a Looming Shortage

12 minutes ago

Arsenal: Keown claims ‘desperate’ Premier League manager has cost the Gunners the title

13 minutes ago

Iran will fortify relationship with foreign adversaries in wake of president’s death: Dan Hoffman

13 minutes ago

'Know what you're voting for' Hrithik Roshan tells fans

13 minutes ago

WATCH: Trevor Noah meets Jurgen Klopp ahead of Anfield farewell

13 minutes ago

South Africa Rides Wave of Investor Cash Before the Election

13 minutes ago

‘Always room for improvement’: ABA responds to scathing ASIC review of banking assistance

13 minutes ago

‘Extremely large’ hubs of solar renewables dubbed ‘solar Tasmania’s’

13 minutes ago

Iran president, foreign minister among those killed in helicopter crash

13 minutes ago

Conor McGregor offers advice to Tyson Fury after loss to Oleksandr Usyk

14 minutes ago

US Dollar May Depreciate 4%, MUFG's Halpenny Says

14 minutes ago

If Trump wins, what would hold him back?

14 minutes ago

How Florida and Texas became the Wall Street of the south

14 minutes ago

Elizabeth Arden's newest Eight Hour moisturiser is like a 'drink of water' for the skin

14 minutes ago

GB News accuses Ofcom of trying to silence it after watchdog considers sanctions

14 minutes ago

Dali cargo ship that hit Baltimore bridge begins to refloat

14 minutes ago

"I'm sick of you, you can't guard me" - How an encounter with Jamal Murray last year fueled Anthony Edwards

14 minutes ago

Julian Assange granted leave to appeal against extradition to US

14 minutes ago

'I still have that fire': Helio Castroneves leads list of active Indy 500 winners

14 minutes ago

The best morning skincare routine for your skin type, according to a dermatologist

14 minutes ago

Hall of Fame Oakland Raiders center Jim Otto dies at 86

14 minutes ago

Infected blood scandal inquiry: Key findings from damning final report

14 minutes ago

Target to lower prices on about 5,000 basic goods as inflation sends customers scrounging for deals

15 minutes ago

The Last Of Us Got A Huge Honor - That No TV Series Wants

16 minutes ago

Container ship set to be moved 8 weeks after Francis Scott Key Bridge crash

16 minutes ago

Child is among 3 dead after Amtrak train hits a pickup truck in upstate New York

16 minutes ago

Target lowering prices on 5,000 frequently bought items

18 minutes ago

Baltimore bridge collapse: Ship that caused deadly crash refloated, moving back to port

18 minutes ago

Iran’s president, foreign minister dead in helicopter crash, state TV reports

19 minutes ago

Brett Maston: Notorious bank bandit once regarded as Australia's most wanted man arrested in Perth after 12 hour police manhunt

20 minutes ago

Channel Seven poach A Current Affair star with plans to go head-to-head with 60 Minutes amid ratings war

20 minutes ago

Video: Forensic psychiatrist reveals the different types of stalkers - and why ignoring them is not the key to putting them off

20 minutes ago

Video: Amir Khan's £11.5m luxury wedding venue finally hosts its first marriage: Bride arrives on horse-drawn carriage and guests are serenaded by violins inside 'Dubai-style' building that sits next to car wash and fly-tipping spot

20 minutes ago

Elon Musk gets approval from FDA to implant his Neuralink brain chip into a second patient - which allows people to control computers with their minds

20 minutes ago

Husband who killed his wife by burying her alive in a hand-dug grave near the home they shared with their two young daughters while they were mid-divorce is sentenced to life in prison with no parole

20 minutes ago

Man accused of sickening bestiality charges offered his 'special ingredient' to would-be mums

20 minutes ago

Terrifying moment Mookie Betts smashes a ball into an 8-year-old boy's eye during Dodgers home game

20 minutes ago

Emma Corrin, 28, cuts a casual figure in a white tank top and slacks on shopping trip with boyfriend Rami Malek, 43, in Hampstead

20 minutes ago

ICC prosecutor seeks arrest warrant against Netanyahu and Hamas leader

20 minutes ago

Scottie Scheffler planning to play next week after 'hectic' week at 2024 PGA Championship

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch