The Borneo Post

Kate revelation shines light on under-50s cancer mystery

- Daniel Lawler

We just don’t have the evidence yet to say exactly what is causing this rise.

Shivan Sivakumar

PARIS: When Catherine, Princess of Wales, revealed she was being treated for cancer, part of the shock was that an otherwise healthy 42-year-old has a disease that mostly plagues older people.

However, researcher­s have been increasing­ly sounding the alarm that more and more people under 50 are getting cancer – and no one knows why.

Across the world, the rate of under-50s diagnosed with 29 common cancers surged by nearly 80 per cent between 1990 and 2019, a large study in BMJ Oncology found last year.

The researcher­s predicted the number of new cancer cases among younger adults will rise another 30 per cent by the end of this decade, with wealthy countries particular­ly affected.

The increase in cases – and soaring global population – means that the number of deaths among under 50s from cancer has risen by nearly 28 per cent over the last 30 years.

This occurred even as the odds of people of all ages surviving cancer have roughly doubled over the last half century.

Shivan Sivakumar, a cancer researcher at the UK’s University of Birmingham, called it an ‘epidemic’ of young adult cancer.

Since Kate Middleton revealed recently that her cancer was discovered after she received abdominal surgery earlier this year, Sivakumar and other doctors have spoken out about the uptick in younger cancer patients they have been seeing at their clinics.

While breast cancer remains the most common for people under 50, the researcher­s expressed particular concern about the rise of gastrointe­stinal cancers – such as of the colon, pancreas, liver and oesophagus – in younger adults.

Colon cancer is now the leading cause of cancer deaths in men under 50 in the United States, according to the American Cancer Society. For women, it is number two – behind only breast cancer.

One high profile case of colorectal cancer was ‘Black Panther’ actor Chadwick Boseman, who died at the age of 43 in 2020.

Why is this happening?

“We just don’t have the evidence yet to say exactly what is causing this rise,” Sivakumar told AFP, adding it was likely a combinatio­n of factors.

Helen Coleman, a cancer epidemiolo­gy professor at Queen’s University Belfast who has studied early onset cancer in Northern Ireland, told AFP there were two potential explanatio­ns.

One is that people in their 40s were exposed to factors known to cause cancer – such tobacco smoke, alcohol or being obese – at an earlier age than previous generation­s.

She pointed out that the ‘obesity epidemic’ did not start until the 1980s.

Sivakumar felt that at least part of the puzzle could be explained by obesity.

However, there is ‘another wave’ of under-50 patients who are neither obese nor geneticall­y predispose­d still getting cancer, he emphasised, adding that this could not be put down to ‘statistica­l chance’.

The other theory, Coleman said, is that ‘something different’ has been going on with her generation.

Fingers have been pointed out a range of possible culprits – including chemicals, new drugs and microplast­ics – but none have been proven.

Some have suggested that so-called ultra-processed foods could be to blame.

“But there’s very little data to back any of that up,” Coleman said.

Another theory is that the food we eat could be changing our gut microbiome.

While there is nothing conclusive yet, Coleman said her own research suggested that cancer causes changes to the microbiome, not the other way around.

Anti-vaxx conspiracy theorists have even tried to blame Covid19 vaccines.

This is easily disproven, because the rise in young adult cancer has taken place over decades, but the vaccines have only been around for a few years.

What can be done?

To address the rise in younger colorectal cancer, in 2021 the US lowered the recommende­d age for screening to 45. Other countries have yet to follow suit.

But the researcher­s hoped that Catherine’s experience would remind people at home that they should consult their doctor if they sense anything is wrong.

“People know their bodies really well,” Sivakumar said.

“If you really feel that something isn’t right, don’t delay - just get yourself checked out.”

 ?? — AFP file photto ?? A picture shows the front pages of some of Britain’s national newspapers, dominated by stories about Catherine announcing her cancer diagnosis, in Amersham on March 23.
— AFP file photto A picture shows the front pages of some of Britain’s national newspapers, dominated by stories about Catherine announcing her cancer diagnosis, in Amersham on March 23.

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