PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?

2025-07-08
(Press-News.org) A new paper in BJS, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that early-onset gastrointestinal cancer rates are rising dramatically across the globe.

In the United States, the age-standardized rate of colorectal cancer decreased from 66.2 cases per 100,000 people in 1985 to 35.7 cases per 100,000 people in 2018. In contrast, early-onset colorectal cancer has shown a marked increase in both men and women in the United States since the mid-1990s, with the age-adjusted incidence rising from 5.9 cases per 100,000 in 2000 to 8.4 cases per 100,000 in 2017. Compared with adults born in 1950, those born in 1990 have twice the risk of developing colon cancer and four times the risk of developing rectal cancer.

The incidence of early-onset colorectal cancer, the most common type of gastrointestinal cancer, is also increasing globally, particularly in high-income countries. A study of 20 European countries revealed significant increases in early-onset colorectal cancer from 2004 to 2016, with increases of 7.9%, 4.9%, and 1.6% for individuals aged 20–29, 30–39, and 40–49 years, respectively. A recent Centers for Disease Control analysis revealed 185% increase among people between 20 and 24 and a 333% increase in incidence of colorectal cancer among people between 15 and 19.

With these rising rates, early onset colorectal cancer has become the leading cause of cancer-related death for men under 50 and the second-leading cause for women under 50 in the United States. The disease affects Black, Hispanic, Indigenous, and Asian people disproportionately. A National Cancer Institute analysis from 1973 through 2009 demonstrated that doctors diagnosed 16.5% of American Indians/Alaska Natives, 15.4% of Hispanics, 12% of Asians/Pacific Islanders, and 11.9% of Black patients with colorectal cancer before age 50, compared to only 6.7% of non-Hispanic White patients.

The researchers in this study explain that patients with early-onset colorectal cancers often experience delays in diagnosis because neither physicians nor patients suspect cancer. Consequently, doctors are more likely to diagnosis such patients when they are at advanced stages of the disease.

Though official guidelines for early-onset and average-onset cancers are the same, researchers here emphasize that younger patients are more likely to receive aggressive treatment, often without a survival advantage. Young patients with gastrointestinal cancers also have unique and often unmet needs as they navigate cancer care. Often in their peak earning years, younger patients are more likely to experience financial hardship because of their cancer diagnosis. They may find it particularly difficult to explain such diagnosis with young children. They also may be thinking of growing or starting their families at the time.

Though the American Society of Clinical Oncology recommends oncologists discuss treatment-related fertility concerns with patients of reproductive age, a recent study found that 50% of patients reported that their doctors did not talk to them about the impact of their disease or treatment on having future children.

Survivors of early onset colorectal cancer are also more likely to report problems with anxiety, body image, and sexual dysfunction compared to advanced onset survivors, and are also more likely to report worse social functioning and physical quality of life. Male patients with early onset colorectal cancers are more likely to suffer depression than those diagnosed with average onset colorectal cancers.

The researchers note that risk factors associated with increased risk of early onset gastrointestinal cancers include obesity, a Western-style diet, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, smoking, and alcohol use. Obesity, particularly in childhood and adolescence, is increasing in the United States, and is a leading theory for the rising rates of several early onset gastrointestinal cancers. In a 2019 study of 85,256 women in the United States, those with a BMI over 30 had close to double the risk of developing early-onset colorectal cancer compared women with lower BMIs.

“The incidence of GI cancers in adults younger than age 50 is rising globally,” said the paper’s lead author, Sara Char. “Ongoing research efforts investigating the biology of early-onset GI cancers are critical to developing more effective screening, prevention, and treatment strategies.”

 

The paper, “Early-Onset Gastrointestinal Cancers: A Comprehensive Review and Future Directions,” is available (at midnight on July 8th) at https://academic.oup.com/bjs/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/bjs/znaf102.

Direct correspondence to: 
Sara K. Char
Department of Medical Oncology
Dana Farber Cancer Institute
450 Brookline Ave
Boston, MA 02215
Sara_Char@dfci.harvard.edu

To request a copy of the study, please contact:
Daniel Luzer 
daniel.luzer@oup.com

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pharmacogenomics expert advances precision medicine for bipolar disorder

2025-07-08
CAGLIARI, Sardinia, Italy, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview published today in Genomic Psychiatry, Dr. Mirko Manchia opens up about his transformative journey from a small Sardinian city to becoming a leading voice in psychiatric pharmacogenomics, revealing how personal family experiences with mental illness sparked a lifelong quest to understand why psychiatric medications work brilliantly for some patients while failing others. The Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Cagliari has spent decades unraveling one of psychiatry's most perplexing puzzles: why does lithium, psychiatry's oldest mood stabilizer, ...

Brazilian researcher explores centenarian stem cells for aging insights

2025-07-08
SÃO PAULO, São Paulo, Brazil, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview, postdoctoral researcher Dr. Mateus Vidigal de Castro shares his contributions to longevity research at the University of São Paulo. Working under the supervision of Professor Mayana Zatz at one of Brazil's leading genetics research centers, Dr. de Castro studies induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from centenarians, particularly those who demonstrated recovery from COVID-19. Research ...

Dr. Xuyu Qian's breakthrough analysis of 18 million brain cells advances understanding of human brain development

2025-07-08
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, USA – July 8, 2025 – Genomic Press today published in Genomic Psychiatry an in-depth interview with Dr. Xuyu Qian, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, whose pioneering research in brain organoid technology and spatial transcriptomics is transforming our understanding of human brain development and neurodevelopmental disorders. Dr. Qian's recent landmark study, published in Nature (2025), represents one of the ...

Gene networks decode human brain architecture from health to glioma

2025-07-08
SAN FRANCISCO, California, USA, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview published in Brain Medicine, Dr. Michael C. Oldham shares his unconventional journey from advertising executive to computational neuroscientist and his groundbreaking contributions to understanding the human brain's cellular and molecular architecture through gene coexpression analysis. From Madison Avenue to molecular neuroscience Dr. Oldham's path to neuroscience was anything but direct. After graduating from Duke University at age 20 ...

How artificial light at night damages brain health and metabolism

2025-07-08
MORGANTOWN, West Virginia, USA, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Innovators & Ideas interview published today, distinguished neuroscientist Dr. Randy J. Nelson shares insights from his pioneering research on how disrupted circadian rhythms affect brain function and overall health. The interview, published in Brain Medicine, traces Dr. Nelson's unconventional path from farm work and autopsy assistant to becoming one of the world's leading authorities on biological rhythms. Dr. Nelson, who chairs the Department of Neuroscience at West Virginia University, has spent the ...

For ultrasound, ultra-strength not always a good thing

2025-07-08
Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have solved a long-standing mystery in the field of sonochemistry: why do chemical reactions slow down when ultrasonic power becomes too strong? Their findings allow for smarter use of ultrasound in science and industry, such as for environmental cleanup or the creation of useful nanoparticles. Although ultrasound is inaudible to the human ear, it plays a powerful role in sonochemistry. When ultrasonic waves are applied to a liquid, they generate microscopic bubbles that rapidly ...

Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results

2025-07-08
Finding motivation to exercise can be the greatest challenge in working out. This might be part of the reason why less than a quarter of people achieve the activity goals recommended by the World Health Organization. But what if working out could be more enjoyable? One way of achieving this could be opting for types of exercise that fit our personalities. To this end, researchers in the UK now have examined how personality affects what types of exercise we prefer, and our commitment and engagement to them. The results ...

Study shows people perceive biodiversity

2025-07-08
A new study published in People and Nature finds that both sight and sound influence perception of biodiversity, and participants were slightly more accurate when assessing forest biodiversity through sound alone than through sight alone. This interdisciplinary research, led by scientists from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, and Leipzig University, brings together methods from environmental psychology and forest and soundscape ecology.  In a lab-based sorting study, two groups of 48 participants examined either photographs ...

Personality type can predict which forms of exercise people enjoy

2025-07-08
The key to sticking to and reaping the rewards of exercise over the long term may be as simple as doing something you enjoy, say the authors of a new study from UCL. Previous research has shown that the personalities of people who engage in different types of organised sport tend to vary. But what is less clear is how personality affects the types of exercise people actually enjoy doing. The new study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, explored whether individual personality traits corresponded to the enjoyment of different types of exercise, whether participants completed a prescribed exercise programme, and the subsequent ...

People can accurately judge biodiversity through sight and sound

2025-07-08
People’s intuitive perception of biodiversity through visual and audio cues is remarkably accurate and aligns closely with scientific measures of biodiversity. This is according to new research published in the British Ecological Society journal, People and Nature. In a new study led by researchers at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) and the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, participants with no ecological training were asked to sort ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The unprecedented transformation in energy: The Third Energy Revolution toward carbon neutrality

Building on the far side: AI analysis suggests sturdier foundation for future lunar bases

Far-field superresolution imaging via k-space superoscillation

10 Years, 70% shift: Wastewater upgrades quietly transform river microbiomes

Why does chronic back pain make everyday sounds feel harsher? Brain imaging study points to a treatable cause

Video messaging effectiveness depends on quality of streaming experience, research shows

Introducing the “bloom” cycle, or why plants are not stupid

The Lancet Oncology: Breast cancer remains the most common cancer among women worldwide, with annual cases expected to reach over 3.5 million by 2050

Improve education and transitional support for autistic people to prevent death by suicide, say experts

GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic could cut risk of major heart complications after heart attack, study finds

Study finds Earth may have twice as many vertebrate species as previously thought

NYU Langone orthopedic surgeons present latest clinical findings and research at AAOS 2026

New journal highlights how artificial intelligence can help solve global environmental crises

Study identifies three diverging global AI pathways shaping the future of technology and governance

Machine learning advances non targeted detection of environmental pollutants

ACP advises all adults 75 or older get a protein subunit RSV vaccine

New study finds earliest evidence of big land predators hunting plant-eaters

Newer groundwater associated with higher risk of Parkinson’s disease

New study identifies growth hormone receptor as possible target to improve lung cancer treatment

Routine helps children adjust to school, but harsh parenting may undo benefits

IEEE honors Pitt’s Fang Peng with medal in power engineering

SwRI and the NPSS Consortium release new version of NPSS® software with improved functionality

Study identifies molecular cause of taste loss after COVID

Accounting for soil saturation enhances atmospheric river flood warnings

The research that got sick veterans treatment

Study finds that on-demand wage access boosts savings and financial engagement for low-wage workers

Antarctica has lost 10 times the size of Greater Los Angeles in ice over 30 years

Scared of spiders? The real horror story is a world without them

New study moves nanomedicine one step closer to better and safer drug delivery

Illinois team tests the costs, benefits of agrivoltaics across the Midwest

[Press-News.org] What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?