The Boston Globe

Cancer deaths in USare falling

But number of new cases is up

- By Gina Kolata

Cancer deaths in the United States are falling, with 4 million deaths prevented since 1991, according to the American Cancer Society’s annual report.

At the same time, the society reported that the number of new cancer cases had ticked up to more than 2 million in 2023, from 1.9 million in 2022. Cancer remains the second leading cause of death in the United States, after heart disease. Doctors believe that it is urgent to understand changes in the death rate, as well as changes in cancer diagnoses.

The cancer society highlighte­d three chief factors in reduced cancer deaths: declines in smoking, early detection, and greatly improved treatments.

Breast cancer mortality is one area where treatment had a significan­t impact.

In the 1980s and 1990s, metastatic breast cancer “was regarded as a death sentence,” said Donald Berry, a statistici­an at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and an author of a new paper on breast cancer with Sylvia K. Plevritis of Stanford University and other researcher­s (several authors of the paper reported receiving payments from companies involved in cancer therapies).

The paper, published Tuesday in JAMA, found that the death rate from breast cancer had fallen to 27 per 100,000 women in 2019 from 48 per 100,000 in 1975. That includes metastatic cancer, which counted for nearly 30 percent of the reduction in the breast cancer death rate.

Breast cancer treatment has improved so much that it has become a bigger factor than screening in saving lives, said Ruth Etzioni, a biostatist­ician at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center.

Death rates have even declined among women in their 40s, who generally did not have regular mammograms, said Dr. Mette Kalager, a professor of medicine at the University of Oslo and Oslo University Hospital, “indicating a substantia­l effect of treatment,” she said.

“The biggest untold story in breast cancer is how much treatment has improved,” said Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, a cancer public health researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “This is unambiguou­s good news.”

The American Cancer Society found increases in the incidences of many cancers, including cancers of the breast, the prostate, the uterus, the oral cavity, the liver (in women but not men), the kidney, and the colon and rectum in middle-aged adults. Melanoma incidence also increased. The numbers were adjusted for changes in the size of the population.

Dr. William Dahut, chief scientific officer of the cancer society, said that while the overall rate of colorectal cancer had continued to decline, he was concerned about an increase in one group: people younger than 55. In those younger people, the society reports, the incidence is now 18.5 per 100,000 and has been rising by 1 percent to 2 percent a year since the mid-1990s, with 30,500 people expected to be diagnosed this year.

In the late 1990s, colorectal cancer was the fourth leading cause of death for people younger than 50. Now it is the leading cause in men under 50 and the second leading cause in women. Doctors cannot say why.

“We don’t have a good explanatio­n,” Dahut said. “We do a lot of hand waving. Is it diet? Is it obesity? Is it something in the environmen­t?”

Cancer researcher­s say that the more you look for cancer, the more you find. As screening becomes increasing­ly sensitive, doctors are discoverin­g more and more cancers.

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