The Commercial Appeal

Colorectal cancers surge among young adults

Poor diets, inactivity thought to be factors

- Kim Painter

Colon and rectal cancers have increased dramatical­ly and steadily in millennial­s and Generation X adults in the United States over the past four decades, a study confirmed Tuesday.

While scientists have not pinpointed an exact cause, prime suspects include obesity, inactivity and poor diets, said researcher­s from the American Cancer Society, reporting in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

“Colorectal cancer had been thought a success story,” because overall rates have fallen as screening has increased among older adults, said lead researcher Rebecca Siegel. “But it appears that under the surface, the underlying risk for colorectal cancer is rising, and it is rising pretty quickly among young adults.”

The result: Someone born in 1990 has double the risk of early colon cancer and quadruple the risk of early rectal cancer as someone born in 1950, Siegel and her colleagues reported.

It is likely that millennial­s and Generation X adults “will carry that risk forward” as they age, she said.

Most of the nation’s 135,000 annual cases and 50,000 deaths related to colon and rectal cancer still occur among people over 55. But the share of cases involving younger adults has risen to 29percent for rectal cancer and 17 percent for colon cancer, the study showed. About 11,000 people in their 40s and 4,000 under 40 were diagnosed in 2013.

Previous studies picked up increases in young adults, but the new study provided new age-group details from nearly 500,000 cases reported between 1974 and 2013. For example, it found rectal cancer rates rose an average of 3.2 percent a year among people in their 30s, starting in 1983.

“Anything more than about 1 percent a year is a big change,” Siegel said. Every age group under 50 saw sustained yearly increases at least that big, while every age group over 55 saw sustained declines, the study showed.

“We are absolutely seeing this” in cancer clinics, not only in the United States, but around the world, said Thomas Weber, a surgical oncologist who specialize­s in colorectal cancers and is a professor at the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center.

The latest data should “really raise the alarm,” he said.

Still, no health group recommends that average-risk young adults get screening tests such as colonoscop­ies and stool testings. The cancer society will look at whether that should change, Siegel said. All screening tests come with potential harms, as well as benefits, she noted.

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