The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Cancer diagnoses at the highest level ever on record in Scotland

JUMP: Figures show increase of 13.9% in a decade across the whole country

- TOM EDEN

The number of cancer diagnoses has reached its highest level in Scotland, latest figures reveal.

Some 33,958 cancers – excluding skin melanomas–- were diagnosed in Scotland during 2018, an increase of 4,146 (13.9%) since 2008.

The NHS Scotland figures show a sharp jump in cancers diagnosed between 2017 and 2018, with 1,168 more cases. This compares to an average increase of 331 between the previous nine years.

With an increasing population and life expectancy, the risk of developing cancer has fallen by 3.5% in the last decade.

Men are more likely to develop cancer than women, although the 2018 figures show approximat­ely 500 more females were diagnosed, in part due to their longer life expectancy and the cancers they are susceptibl­e to.

Overall, lung cancer remains the most common, with 5,356 cases. Breast

“Research into better and kinder treatments is needed more than ever. MARION ONEILL, CANCER RESEARCH UK

cancer is the most common among women only, while this is prostate cancer for men.

Lung cancer is three times more likely in the most deprived areas of Scotland compared to the least deprived parts, the figures show, while breast and prostate cancer are more common in less deprived areas.

In females in the decade to 2018, there were significan­t increases in rates of thyroid cancer (up 60%), liver (up 54%) and uterus (up 19%), while there were significan­t falls in the rates of cancers of the stomach (down 29%), and the ovary (down 15%).

For males, there were significan­t increases in rates of thyroid cancer (up 56%), liver (up 37%), kidney (up 26%) over the period, in contrast to falling rates of stomach cancer (39%) and leukaemia (26%).

Lung cancer rates fell by 10% in the decade to 2018 due to a fall of 19% in men but almost no change in women, attributed to differing smoking patterns in previous decades.

Prostate cancer increased by 7% while there was little change in breast cancer in women. Colorectal cancer rates fell 18% over the same period.

Marion O’neill, Cancer Research UK’S head of external affairs in Scotland, said: “These statistics clearly illustrate that research into better and kinder treatments is needed more than ever.”

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