Study finds colorectal cancer leading form of cancer deaths in people under 50
A JAMA study released Jan. 22 found that colorectal cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths in people under age 50. The study examined cancer mortality in the U.S. among the five leading causes from 1990 through 2023. Among the findings, from 2014-2023 there were average annual declines in deaths from brain cancer (0.3%), breast cancer (1.4%), leukemia (2.3%) and lung cancer (5.7%). Colorectal cancer was the only condition in the top five that increased, averaging a 1.1% increase annually since 2005, and becoming the most common form of cancer death in 2023. It ranked fifth from 1990-1994.
Related News Articles
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced members of the Healthcare Advisory Committee March 26.…
Headline
An American Heart Association study published March 25 found that children born to mothers with premature placental separation could be at higher risk of heart…
Headline
A JAMA study published March 18 found that women who experience premature menopause have a 40% higher lifetime risk of coronary heart disease. Approximately 15…
Headline
The American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association and nine other medical associations March 13 released updated guidelines on managing cholesterol…
Headline
A report published March 2 by the American Cancer Society found that colorectal cancer rates among adults 65 and older continue to decline while rates for…
Headline
The Medical Student Education Authorization Act (H.R. 5428), legislation which would authorize a federal program to provide grants through fiscal…