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Colorectal cancer is now officially the leading cause of: cancer related death This is a significant increase from the 1990s, when the number of deaths was the fifth highest among men and women under the age of 50.
That’s according to an American Cancer Society study published Thursday in JAMA.
Researchers analyzed decades of national mortality data for all types of cancer and found: colorectal cancer It currently kills more people under the age of 50 than all other forms of the disease, including lung, breast, brain, and leukemia.
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Overall cancer deaths in this age group have been on the decline since 1990, with a combined decrease of about 44%.
Colorectal cancer was the only major cancer for which mortality rates for people under 50 increased sharply during this period, the researchers noted.
Colorectal cancer is now officially the leading cause of cancer-related death in men and women under the age of 50. (St. Petersburg)
colorectal cancer research Dr. Aparna Parikh, medical director of the Young Adult Colorectal Cancer Center at Massachusetts Comprehensive Cancer Center and who is not affiliated with ACS, said the community is working to understand why rates are rising among young people.
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“We don’t fully understand why yet, but it appears that a person’s risk factors, overall makeup, and early exposure interact,” she previously told FOX News Digital. “Exposures include dietary exposurepotential environmental and antibiotic exposures, and appropriate host lifestyle factors.

Colorectal cancer is the only major cancer where mortality rates for people under age 50 have increased sharply over the past 30 years. (St. Petersburg)
The main risk factors include family history, obesity, smoking, heavy alcohola diet high in red or processed meat, inflammatory bowel disease, or a personal or family history of polyps.
To reduce infection among young patients, doctors emphasized the importance of increasing public awareness of the disease, with a focus on early recognition of symptoms.
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Early warning signs of colorectal cancer include changes in bowel habits, abdominal pain, rectal bleeding, weakness, and weight loss.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends that average-risk adults begin screening for colorectal cancer at age 45. (St. Petersburg)
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The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends that screening for colorectal cancer begin at age 45 and continue until age 75 for average-risk adults.
Those who have genetic or family history Early screening may be recommended.
The agency says that for people between the ages of 75 and 85, screening decisions should be based on each individual’s medical history, preferences, and overall health.
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“The gold standard is colonoscopy, but there are also suitable stool-based tests,” Parikh said. “If you have symptoms such as weight loss, bloody stool, anemia, or changes in your physical condition, defecation habitsyou should go for a colonoscopy right away. ”
