Cancer survival rates on the rise, U.S. analysis finds - Action News
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Health

Cancer survival rates on the rise, U.S. analysis finds

The proportion of people surviving years after a cancer diagnosis is improving, according to a new analysis.

Better odds of survival does not apply equally to all age groups

Advances in treatments and better cancer screenings and diagnoses are likely responsible for the overall increases in survival, the researchers suggested. (iStock)

The proportion of people surviving years after a cancer diagnosis is improving, according to a new analysis.

For men and women ages 50 to 64, who were diagnosed in 2005 to 2009 with a variety of cancer types, the risk of dying from those cancers within five years of diagnosis was 39 to 68 per cent lower than it was for people of the same age diagnosed in 1990 to 1994, researchers found.

"Pretty much all populations improved their cancer survival over time," said Dr. Wei Zheng, the study's senior author from Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

As reported in JAMA Oncology, he and his colleagues analyzed data from a national sample of more than 1 million people who were diagnosed with cancer of the colon or rectum, breast, prostate, lung, liver, pancreas or ovary between 1990 and 2010.

Among people ages 50 to 64 diagnosed with colon or rectal cancer in 1990 to 1994, about 58 per cent were alive five years later. Five-year survival rates were about 83 per cent for breast cancer, about 7 per cent for liver cancer, about 13 per cent for lung cancer, about 5 per cent for pancreas cancer, about 91 per cent for prostate cancer and about 47 per cent for ovarian cancer.

Among people in the same age range diagnosed between 2005 and 2009, a larger proportion survived each of the cancers except ovarian cancer. Risk of death at five years fell by 43 per cent for colon or rectum cancers, 52 per cent for breast cancer, 39 per cent for liver cancer, 68 per cent for prostate cancer, 25 per cent for lung cancer and 27 per cent for pancreas cancer, compared to the early 1990s.

The better odds of survival did not apply equally to all age groups, however, and tended to favor younger patients. For example, the risk of death fell by only 12 to 35 per cent for people diagnosed between ages 75 to 85.

Treatment trials should be more inclusive

And while there was a small improvement in ovarian cancer survival among white women during the study period, survival among black women with ovarian cancer got worse.

Advances in treatments and better cancer screenings and diagnoses are likely responsible for the overall increases in survival, the researchers write.

"In general our study shows different segments benefit differently from recent advances in oncology," Zheng said. "We need to find out the reason."

The researchers speculate that older people may not benefit equally from medical advances, because doctors may avoid aggressive care for them for fear they couldn't tolerate treatments like surgery or chemotherapy.

Also, older people and racial minorities are less likely to be included in trials of new cancer treatments, the researchers point out. They say more effort should be made to include those groups in trials so doctors have treatment guidelines based on science.

"Additional research is needed to find the reasons why there are gaps," Zheng said.