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

High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients

UC Davis research highlights urgent need for tailored survivorship care

2025-11-26
(Press-News.org) A new study of adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with seven common cancers reveals that nearly one in ten patients diagnosed with non-metastatic disease later develop metastatic recurrence — a condition associated with significantly worse survival outcomes. Metastasis is when cancer cells spread from the initial or primary site to other parts of the body. It comes with significantly worse survival outcomes.

UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center scientists led the research. The findings highlight the urgent need to identify and address survivorship needs for young cancer survivors.

“As treatments improve survival, young patients with cancer face unique challenges,” said Ann Brunson, UC Davis research analyst and the study’s lead author. “Our research deepens understanding of survivorship and the impact of metastatic recurrence, using statewide data to reveal trends and guide future studies.”

The research, based on data from more than 48,000 AYAs in California, was published in JAMA Oncology on November 26. It is the first study of its kind to examine metastatic disease in this population.

Researchers analyzed data from the California Cancer Registry linked with statewide health care records from the California Department of Health Care Access and Information (HCAI). The study group included AYAs aged 15–39 diagnosed with cancer between 2006 and 2018, with follow-up through the end of 2020. Metastatic recurrence was identified by specific diagnosis codes HCAI or cancer cause of death.

The median follow-up time was 6.7 years and the median age at diagnosis was 33. Most patients were non-Hispanic white (48%) or Hispanic (32%), lived in high socioeconomic status neighborhoods (43%) and had private or military insurance (76%).

High rates of metastatic disease and recurrence

Among the 48,406 AYAs studied, 9.2% had metastatic disease at diagnosis while 9.5% developed metastatic recurrence later.  AYAs with colorectal cancer (44.2%) and sarcoma (41.7%) had the highest overall proportion of metastatic disease, followed by patients with breast (23.9%), cervical (23.6%) and testicular (21.6%) cancers.

For AYAs initially diagnosed with nonmetastatic disease, the five-year cumulative incidence of metastatic recurrence was highest for those with:

Sarcoma (24.5%) Colorectal cancer (21.8%) Cervical cancer (16.3%) Breast cancer (14.7%)  Cervical cancer had particularly high recurrence rates across all stages, with stage 3 patients experiencing a cumulative incidence of 41.7%.

The study also found that recurrence rates varied over time. Cervical cancer recurrence increased from 12.7% in 2006-2009 to 20.4% in 2015-2018, while colorectal cancer and melanoma saw declines. Notably, stage 1 cervical cancer showed the most pronounced increase, while stage 3 melanoma had a significant decrease in recurrence.

Survival after metastatic recurrence was worse than survival for those diagnosed with metastatic disease initially, except in testicular and thyroid cancers. Breast cancer patients with metastatic recurrence had nearly a threefold increased hazard of death (HR=2.87), while cervical (HR=2.10), melanoma (HR=1.61), sarcoma (HR=1.57), and colorectal cancer (HR=1.53) patients also faced significantly higher hazards of death.

To make sure their method for detecting metastatic recurrence was accurate, the researchers compared their findings to Kaiser Permanente Northern California and found an overall concordance rate of 96.9% when they accounted for patients who were never completely disease-free.

“These findings highlight the significant burden of metastatic recurrence among adolescents and young adults and the need for tailored survivorship care,” said Theresa Keegan, the study’s senior author. “Understanding these patterns helps us identify inequities and evaluate how well our efforts are working to prevent, detect and treat both early and metastatic disease.”

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Global Virus Network statement on the Marburg virus outbreak in Ethiopia

2025-11-26
Tampa, FL, USA, November 26, 2025: The Global Virus Network (GVN), a coalition of leading human and animal virologists in more than 40 countries dedicated to advancing pandemic preparedness through research, education and training, and global health solutions, today issued a statement on the newly confirmed outbreak of Marburg virus disease (MVD) in southern Ethiopia. This represents the country’s first documented outbreak of Marburg virus and raises urgent public health, research, and surveillance imperatives. According to the World Health Organization ...

'Exploitative' online money gaming in India causing financial, health and social harm, analysis shows

2025-11-26
“Exploitative” online money gaming in India is harming people’s financial and mental health and causing deep social problems, a new study shows. The analysis says new legislation which bans these games is constitutionally defensible and justified. It highlights how the business models of companies running the games are designed to exploit users through aggressive promotional spending and addictive design features. The study alleges some companies are spending up to 70 per cent of revenue on promotional activities designed to create addicted users who will subsequently lose far more than they receive ...

Mayo Clinic researchers identify why some lung tumors respond well to immunotherapy

2025-11-26
ROCHESTER, Minn. — For some patients with the most common type of lung cancer, known as lung adenocarcinoma, there's new hope. In a new study published in Cell Reports, Mayo Clinic researchers have found several previously unknown genetic and cellular processes that occur in lung adenocarcinoma tumors that respond well to immunotherapy. A recently approved group of drugs — immune checkpoint inhibitors — can boost the body's ability to eliminate a tumor and even keep the cancer from coming back. However, while the medications work well for some people, the drugs aren't ...

The pterosaur rapidly evolved flight abilities, in contrast to modern bird ancestors, new study suggests

2025-11-26
In a study of fossils, a research team led by an evolutionary biologist at Johns Hopkins Medicine suggests that a group of giant reptiles alive up to 220 million years ago may have acquired the ability to fly when the animal first appeared, in contrast to prehistoric ancestors of modern birds that developed flight more gradually and with a bigger brain. A report on the study, which used advanced imaging tools to study the brain cavities of pterosaur fossils, and was funded in part by the National Science Foundation, was published Nov. 26 in Current Biology. The findings add to ...

Farms could be our secret climate weapon, QUT-led study finds

2025-11-26
The world’s farms could become one of the most powerful tools in the fight against climate change according to a new international study led by QUT. Published in Plant Physiology, the paper lays out a framework to assess how plant agriculture and synthetic biology innovations can help mitigate climate change by cutting greenhouse gas emissions and increasing carbon storage. Lead author Professor Claudia Vickers, from the QUT School of Biology and Environmental Science, Centre for Agriculture and the Bioeconomy, QUT Centre for Environment and Society, and the ARC Centre of Excellence in Synthetic Biology, ...

New research by ASU paleoanthropologists gives valuable insight into how two ancient human ancestors coexisted in the same area

2025-11-26
With the help of newly identified bones, an enigmatic 3.4-million-year-old hominin foot found in 2009, is assigned to a species different from that of the famous fossil Lucy providing further proof that two ancient species of hominins co-existed at the same time and in the same region. In 2009, scientists led by Arizona State University paleoanthropologist Yohannes Haile-Selassie, found eight bones from the foot of an ancient human ancestor within layers of 3.4-million-year-old sediments in the Afar Rift in Ethiopia. The fossil, called the Burtele Nature Foot, ...

Therapeutic use of cannabis and cannabinoids

2025-11-26
About The Study: Evidence is insufficient for the use of cannabis or cannabinoids for most medical indications. Clear guidance from clinicians is essential to support safe, evidence-based decision-making. Clinicians should weigh benefits against risks when engaging patients in informed discussions about cannabis or cannabinoid use. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kevin P. Hill, MD, MHS, email khill1@bidmc.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jama.2025.19433) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other ...

‘Cognitive Legos’ help the brain build complex behaviors

2025-11-26
PRINCETON, NJ — Artificial intelligence may write award-winning essays and diagnose disease with remarkable accuracy, but biological brains still hold the upper hand in at least one crucial domain: flexibility. Humans, for example, can quickly adapt to new information and unfamiliar challenges with relative ease — learning new computer software, following a recipe, or picking up a new game — while AI systems struggle to learn ‘on the fly’. In a new study, Princeton neuroscientists uncover one reason for the brain’s advantage over AI: it reuses the same cognitive “blocks” across many ...

From inhibition to destruction – kinase drugs found to trigger protein degradation

2025-11-26
Protein kinases are the molecular switches of the cell. They control growth, division, communication, and survival by attaching phosphate groups to other proteins. When these switches are stuck in the “on” position, they can drive cancer and other diseases. Not surprisingly, kinases have become one of the most important drug target families in modern medicine: today, more than 80 kinase inhibitors are FDA-approved, and nearly twice as many are in clinical development. These drugs were designed to block enzymatic activity. But a new study led by CeMM, the Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Vienna), the AITHYRA ...

Diamond defects, now in pairs, reveal hidden fluctuations in the quantum world

2025-11-26
In spaces smaller than a wavelength of light, electric currents jump from point to point and magnetic fields corkscrew through atomic lattices in ways that defy intuition. Scientists have only ever dreamed of observing these marvels directly. Now Princeton researchers have developed a diamond-based quantum sensor that reveals rich new information about magnetic phenomena at this minute scale. The technique uncovers fluctuations that are beyond the reach of existing instruments and provides key insight into materials such as graphene and superconductors. Superconductors have enabled today’s most advanced medical imaging tools and form the basis of hoped-for technologies like lossless ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients

Global Virus Network statement on the Marburg virus outbreak in Ethiopia

'Exploitative' online money gaming in India causing financial, health and social harm, analysis shows

Mayo Clinic researchers identify why some lung tumors respond well to immunotherapy

The pterosaur rapidly evolved flight abilities, in contrast to modern bird ancestors, new study suggests

Farms could be our secret climate weapon, QUT-led study finds

New research by ASU paleoanthropologists gives valuable insight into how two ancient human ancestors coexisted in the same area

Therapeutic use of cannabis and cannabinoids

‘Cognitive Legos’ help the brain build complex behaviors

From inhibition to destruction – kinase drugs found to trigger protein degradation

Diamond defects, now in pairs, reveal hidden fluctuations in the quantum world

Metastatic recurrence among adolescents and young adults with cancer

Disrupted federal funding for extramural cancer research

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and chronic cough

The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires and outpatient acute health care utilization

Why watching someone get hurt on screen makes you wince

Data-driven surgical supply lists can reduce hospital cost and waste

Plants use engineering principles to push through hard soil

Global burden and mortality of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and other motor neuron diseases in 204 countries and territories, 1990–2021

Research into zoonotic disease risks requires a One Health approach

The seamounts of Cape Verde: a biodiversity hotspot and a priority for marine conservation in the central-eastern Atlantic

Scientists uncover how a mitochondrial mutation rewires immune function

Do children imitate communication manners of machines? Experiment on children's response to polite vs. commanding robot

Tiny traps, big trouble: Small regions within cells aggregate proteins linked to ALS, dementia

The future of type 1 diabetes: Can stem cells provide a cure?

UBC researchers uncover how statins harm muscles—and how to stop it

SwRI tackles pre-ignition challenges in hydrogen-fueled engines

Making LAZY plants stand up: Research reveals new pathway plants use to detect gravity

HBNU researchers propose novel sensor-integrated wrapper for food quality monitoring and preservation

Role of ubiquilin-2 liquid droplets in α-synuclein aggregation

[Press-News.org] High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients
UC Davis research highlights urgent need for tailored survivorship care