Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Colon cancer is on the rise in younger adults

- By Emily Mullin

A little over a year ago, Shannon Gregg noticed she was going to the bathroom more frequently and decided to see a gastroente­rologist.

Her doctor thought it was probably just stress, which often causes bowel dysfunctio­n. After all, Gregg was an otherwise healthy 45-year-old. He ran some tests but nothing seemed amiss, except that her iron levels were low. That could be a sign of anemia, which might explain her changes in bathroom habits.

Gregg started getting injections of iron, but they didn’t help. So she asked her doctor to run more tests. All of them came up normal. Eventually, she got a colonoscop­y in June 2021. When she woke up from the procedure, her doctor told her he found several polyps and a malignant tumor in her colon. Polyps are growths on the lining of the colon, or large intestine. While usually harmless, they can develop into cancer over time.

“I never thought colon cancer was something I needed to worry about,” said Gregg, now 46, of Dormont, Pennsylvan­ia.

She didn’t have any of the risk factors for colon cancer. She doesn’t smoke, isn’t overweight, doesn’t eat a lot of processed foods and doesn’t have a family history of colorectal cancer, which includes cancer of the colon or rectum.

Dr. Mark Cedar, chair of gastroente­rology at St. Clair Health, who practices with Pittsburgh Gastroente­rology Associates and treated Gregg, said cases like hers are all too common among colon cancer patients.

“As far as presentati­on or symptoms, the majority have none to very little,” he said.

A change in bowel habits, blood in the stool, diarrhea,

constipati­on, stomach pain and unexplaine­d weight loss can all be symptoms of colon cancer. But many people with colon cancer are asymptomat­ic, Cedar said.

From 2008 to 2017, deaths of people under age 55 from colon cancer increased 1% every year, even as overall colorectal cancer rates dropped. The alarming trend led the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a panel of national disease prevention experts, to issue new recommenda­tions in May 2021 on colorectal cancer screenings.

Previously, adults at average risk for colorectal cancer were supposed to start having regular screenings when they turned 50. Now, the group recommends colorectal screenings begin at age 45.

It’s especially important for people who live in Pennsylvan­ia, where the rate has consistent­ly been

higher than the national rate. For example, in 2016, the overall rate in Pennsylvan­ia for colon cancer was 40.7 per 100,000 people, slightly higher than the

U.S. rate of 37.1 per 100,000 people.

Mirroring the national pattern, the overall rate of colon cancer in Pennsylvan­ia has dropped significan­tly, while the rate for young people has increased.

From 2000 to 2016, the rate of colon cancer among Pennsylvan­ians aged 45 and older decreased from about 93.1 to 58.6 people per 100,000, according to a 2019 report by the state Department of Health. But during that same time, the rate among those between the ages of 20 and 44 increased from 6.6 to 10.1 per 100,000 people.

Why rates of colon cancer among younger adults are increasing while overall cases are decreasing is puzzling medical experts.

“We don’t have all the answers yet,” Cedar said. “There are a lot of studies researchin­g this very problem.”

Family history, genetics, age and a preexistin­g inflammato­ry bowel disease increase a person’s risk of developing colon cancer, but so do lifestyle factors such as a lack of physical activity, poor diet, obesity, alcohol consumptio­n and tobacco use.

“We think processed foods, high fatty foods, fried foods, excessive red meat, and processed meats, like lunch meat, hot dogs, sausages, raise the risk of colon cancer,” Cedar said.

In a 2017 article in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, researcher­s said white bread, breakfast cereals, cakes, french fries and other so-called high glycemic foods may be partly to blame for growing rates of colon cancer in younger adults. Studies have found the typical

Western diet, which is high in fat and low in fiber, can set off inflammati­on in the gastrointe­stinal tract.

Being overweight or obese and the use of tobacco are also risk factors for colon cancer. But Cedar says he’s diagnosed colon cancer in several young adults who are healthy and don’t have any of the usual risk factors.

There may be unique risk factors for colon cancer in younger adults that researcher­s haven’t yet identified. Scientists are studying environmen­tal links — such as air and water pollution and chemicals in soil and food — as potential causes of early-onset colon cancer.

To help prevent colon cancer, Cedar said exercising regularly, maintainin­g a healthy weight and not smoking is important. In terms of diet, he recommende­d foods high in

fiber, such as fresh fruits, beans and lentils, broccoli, carrots, almonds, quinoa and whole grains.

During the COVID19 pandemic, many people have put off elective procedures such as cancer screenings. As a result, doctors are seeing more patients present with advanced stages of cancers that could have been detected earlier with screenings. But experts say now is the time to get caught up on the screenings that might have missed over the past two years.

Colonoscop­ies aren’t the only screening test for colon cancer. At-home stool tests are an option for people who are at average risk of colon cancer, meaning they don’t have a close family member who was diagnosed with colon cancer, have never had polyps and don’t have inflammato­ry bowel disease, which raises the risk for colon cancer.

These tests are mailed to a person’s home and look for the presence of blood in the stool or abnormal DNA in stool that may be indicative of cancer. The blood test should be done every year and the DNA test can be done every three years.

Colonoscop­ies are recommende­d every 10 years, although people at higher risk for colorectal cancer may need to start screening before age 45 or need to be screened more often.

In most cases, colonoscop­ies and other screening tests are covered by insurance. But the Colorectal Cancer Alliance has a financial assistance program to help cover the cost of screenings for patients who need it.

The organizati­on’s online assessment tool, quiz.getscreene­d.org, can help patients figure out what screening options are best for them. Any questions about colon cancer can be answered by calling the alliance’s hotline at 877-422-2030.

 ?? STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ?? Shannon Gregg, 46, who was diagnosed with colon cancer after getting a colonoscop­y, continues to dance during her treatment, at Fire and Ice Allstars in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia, on March 21.
STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE Shannon Gregg, 46, who was diagnosed with colon cancer after getting a colonoscop­y, continues to dance during her treatment, at Fire and Ice Allstars in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia, on March 21.

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