Colorectal cancer in younger people linked to more
advanced disease but better survival
Newswise, January 27, 2016 — Nearly 15 percent of patients diagnosed with colorectal
cancer were younger than 50, the age at which screening recommendations begin.
The
study by researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center
also found that younger patients were more likely to have advanced disease. The
authors suggest this is in part because they are diagnosed only after their
cancers have grown large enough to cause symptoms.
“Colorectal
cancer has traditionally been thought of as a disease of the elderly. This
study is really a wake-up call to the medical community that a relatively large
number of colorectal cancers are occurring in people under 50,” says study
author Samantha Hendren, M.D., M.P.H., associate professor of surgery at the
University of Michigan Medical School.
“To
put this in context, breast cancer screening often begins at age 40, and less
than 5 percent of invasive breast cancers occur in women under that age. Our
study found that about 15 percent of colorectal cancers are diagnosed before
the screening age of 50,” she adds.
The
study identified 258,024 patients diagnosed with colon or rectal cancer from
the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database, a national database of
cancer incidence. Results appear in the journal Cancer.
The
authors found that younger patients were more likely to receive aggressive
surgery and radiation therapy. In addition, this group had better survival
rates, both overall and by stage.
Among
patients whose cancer had spread to distant organs, 21 percent of younger
patients survived beyond five years, compared to 14 percent of older patients.
The
improved survival could be in part due to the more aggressive treatment, the
authors suggest.
The
findings suggest the need for more awareness of warning signs of colorectal
cancer: anemia, a dramatic change in the size or frequency of bowel movements,
and bleeding with bowel movements.
The
authors also say that more people need to consider family history of colorectal
cancer, which is a significant risk factor.
Should
guidelines change to begin screening at an earlier age? Hendren says not so
fast.
“This
would be a big and costly change, and I don’t know whether it would help more
people than it would hurt,” she says. “A lot of research would be required to
understand this before any changes should be made.”
Meanwhile,
the more aggressive treatment and longer survival for younger patients suggest
the need to improve long-term survivorship resources.
“The
cancer community needs to prepare for the increasing number of very young
colorectal cancer survivors who will need long-term support to cope with the
physical and psychological consequences of their disease and treatments,”
Hendren says.
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