Cases of colorectal cancer are rising in people under the age of 50. The good news is that the risks are low for young people as survival rates have risen in the last thirty years.Colorectal cancer rates are rising in people under the age of 50, according to new scientific research.

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A study in the journal The Lancet found that early-onset colorectal cancer incidence rates are rising in 27 of 50 countries and territories examined.

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However, the overall picture becomes more complicated when other data indicates that deaths from colorectal cancer are decreasing. In Germany, they fell by 17 percent in the last 20 years, according to the Federal Statistical Office.

One research study published in January 2024 also found that the disease is claiming fewer lives in Europe than it did 30 years ago.

According to the data, 6.2 million deaths from all cancers have been avoided in the EU since 1988, and 1.3 million death have been avoided in the UK.

The study used population data from the World Health Organization to predict cancer-related deaths for 2024 from all forms of cancer.

"The fall in mortality rates for colorectal cancers was 4.8% in men and 9.5% in women. The reason for the drop is a fall in smoking rates, along with better diagnosis and better treatment for cancers," Carlo La Vecchia, of the University of Milan in Italy, who led the study, told DW.

The largest declines in colorectal cancer mortality rates are for those over the age of 70. But there is an overall reduction in colorectal cancer incidence and mortality, which La Vecchia described as "grounds for optimism."

Michael Bretthauer, a professor of medicine at the University of Oslo, Norway, whom DW asked to comment on the findings, said: "Fatality rates for colorectal cancer used to be 50-60% but now they've dropped to 20-30%. This is a great achievement."

The reduction in mortality rates is due to better surgical techniques with colonoscopies, where the cancerous tissue in the lower intestines and rectum are removed surgically, along with better cancer treatment drugs, and better screening methods to catch the disease earlier.

Colorectal cancer mortality rising in young adults, but few get it

The study also found that colorectal cancer mortality rates are increasing in people below the age of 50.

Mortality rates in younger people in Italy, Poland and Spain for men, and in Germany for women rose by 5-7%, while rates in the UK rose by 26%.

"We see a reversal of trends [of falling cancer mortalities] for those below 50. It's major in the UK and observed in other European countries. We can link this to both increased screening of colorectal cancers and higher rates of obesity, which is a risk factor," said La Vecchia.

However, Bretthauer said the absolute numbers of people below the age of 50 suffering from colorectal cancer were extremely low and little cause for concern.

"There has been a lot of media hype about increases in colorectal cancers in young people, but if you look at the absolute risk rather than relative risk, the rates are very low," he said.

Mortality rates in Germans under the age of 50, for example, are 2.53 per 100,000 people, compared to 164 per 100,000 people over the age of 70.

"Colorectal cancer is primarily a disease of old age. It's why we see lower incidences of the disease in developing countries with younger populations," said Bretthauer. "If you are 30 or 40 years old, [...] the risk is just so low."

What causes colorectal cancer?

Scientists understand "risk factors" that may influence the disease, said Bretthauer, but we don't fully understand how they cause cancer.

Smoking, obesity and diet are all well-established risk factors, for instance, but how they directly impact the disease is not well-known.

"Obesity is a major risk factor, but it's not as high as it is for smoking. Diet is also key, but the evidence is very mixed. For example, there's likely no association between red meat and colorectal cancers. But we don't really know the mechanisms behind how these factors might cause colorectal cancers," said Bretthauer.

Is alcohol a risk factor for colorectal cancer?

Stopping drinking could reduce the impact of colorectal cancers. A WHO report published in December concluded that alcohol consumption is a risk factor for colorectal cancers.

Beatrice Lauby-Secretan, who heads the WHO's IARC cancer prevention program and led the report, said there were direct links between alcohol consumption and colorectal cancer.

"Ethanol — the principal alcohol in alcoholic beverages — is transformed into acetaldehyde. Acetaldehyde is genotoxic and causes DNA damage, leading to carcinogenic mutations. Acetaldehyde alters the composition of the gut microbiome, which leads to intestinal permeability. This, in turn, triggers inflammation, which is known to increase the risk of cancer," Lauby-Secretan told DW in an email.

Reducing or stopping alcohol consumption can, then, reverse the long-term effects of alcohol on body, particularly by decreasing DNA damage within a few months of cessation, said Lauby-Secretan.

The burden of cancer is increasing in the world due to rising aging populations. Lauby-Secretan said the most effective way to counteract cancer burden is through lifestyle changes — "refraining from smoking, reducing alcohol consumption and keeping a healthy weight" — to reduce the risk of cancer developing.

Edited by: Zulfikar Abbany

This article was updated on March 27 2025 to include new data about colorectal cancer survival rates

Sources

Colorectal cancer incidence trends in younger versus older adults: an analysis of population-based cancer registry data

European cancer mortality predictions for the year 2024 with focus on colorectal cancer

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Mar 27, 2025 03:40 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).