Annual American Cancer Society Cancer trends The report revealed the mix of news and statistics for 2025. year.
Racing rates of cancer fell 34% between 1991. and 2022, which ACS attributes on early detection, reduction of smoking and improvement in treatment.
Although these numbers are encouraging, oncologists and cancer experts still have concern about some other factors.
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While the report shows in many fronts, certain areas remain “significant concerns”, dr. Joshua Strauss, present hematologist and medical oncologist at the competence of the Atrantic Medical Group in Morristown, New Jersey, divided by fox.

Below are some of the hardest trends, according to experts.
1. The death of cancer do not improve in younger individuals
The prevalence of cancer in the younger individual and adolescents remains increasing, according to the report, with a rate in teenagers slowly increase by 0.7% each year.
Cancer is the leading cause of death associated with disease Children and adolescents – Most often leukemia, brain cancer and lymph.
In 2025, the ACS estimates that 9,550 children will take up to 14 years and 5,140 adolescents aged 15 to 19, and cancer will die, and that 1,050 children and 600 adolescents will die.

Cancer is the leading causes of death associated with children and adolescents, according to ACS. (Istock)
Dr. Paul Oberstein, gastrointestinal medical oncologist and cross-section of GI medical oncology in the center of Nyu Langone Perlmutter Center, reiterated that people under 50 see higher racing rates from cancer.
“Showing in more cancers,” he said Fox News Digital. “I’d say the biggest finding is in Young women with breast cancer. ”
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Prevalence GI (gastrointestinal) Carcinoma It also increases among younger adults, including pancreatics and colon cancer.
Experts have different hypotheses on why young people are often diagnosed, including nutrition, microplasty exposure or other environmental triggers, according to Oberstein.

One medical oncologist pushed for more research on patients and institutions to “understand what was happening.” (Istock)
“We don’t have a good explanation and we have to Invest in detection Why could it be the case so we can change it, “he said.
2. Cervical cancer continues to pose unnecessary threat
Cervical cancer It is one of the few cancers that can be prevented, and yet thousands of women are still at risk.
Although the incidence of cervical cancers decreased by more than half from the mid-1970s to the mid-2000s due to transmission, these numbers have since stabilized, according to the report.
The projected 13,000 women will be diagnosed with cervical cancer 2025. Years, and 4,000 will die, according to Dr. Jessica Shepherdu, Pension Certified Acosher Gynecologist in Dallas, Texas.

The risk of cervical cancer and mortality rates correlate to connect with the health care provider, one expert said. (Istock)
“The cervical cancer in women from 30 to 44 increases,” Fox News Digital said. “But also, this is the cancer that can eradicate, if not eliminated, because of us who know the understanding of HPV and its prevalence in disease.”
HPV (Human Papillomavirus Infection), the most common cause Cervical cancercan be detected by testing.
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“We have innovation and technology that should reduce certain cervical cancer rates,” Shepherd said.
3. Some communities do not have a health approach
The ACS Report has determined that Indians and Blacks continue to die at higher fields of white people for several different cancers.
Among the patients from cervical cancer, the death rate in black women and mother women is 50%, and 70% higher than in white women.
The five-year relative rate of the survival rate of cervical cancer in black women is 58% compared to 67% of white women, reported report.

Black women are 50% more likely to die from cervical cancer of white women, reported report. (Istock)
This deviation at the mortality rate is most likely due to the lack of access to doctors and regular projections, the shepherd, which pushed for more research, consciousness and public education.
“Cervical cancer is prevented through screening with PAP plus HPV and co-testing,” she said. “If we had the ability to have more potential early discovery, then we could see abnormality in cells … before the cancer occurs and it could take time to address.”
4. Diagnose Cancer get worse
Gastrointestinal (GI) cancers, such as pancreatics, liver, colorectal and stomach cancer, are all considered very deadly.
The ACS report noted that Colorectal diagnoses In men and women under the age of 65 they continued to increase.
Between 2012. and 2021., Cancer frequency rates increases by 2.4% each year in people under 50 and by 0.4% per year in adults 50 to 64.

Colorectal cancer diagnostics in men and women younger than 65 continued to increase, according to ACS. (Istock)
Progress against Pancreas cancer Other carciners, according to the report, as a frequency and mortality rate for 1% each year in men and women.
The ACS noted that 2025 will estimated 67,440 new cases of pancreatics cancer diagnosed in the USA, and 51,980 people will die.
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The mortality rate for the pancreas cancer increased by 0.2% to 0.3% each year in men and women, and the five-year relative survival rate is 13%, which Straussus described as “sad.”
Oberstein, the GI specialist, noted that these types of cancers “often have very bad outcomes”, although there were certain improvements in early detection and treatment in the last few decades.

Gastrointestinal carcinomas “often have very bad outcomes,” warned one oncologist. (Istock)
“The greatest benefit we saw in terms of mortality comes from earlier discovery to the carcinoma,” he said Fox News Digital, adding that colon cancer has the best results when it was discovered early.
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“But we really need to double the attempt to detect the stomach cancer, liver cancer, and especially the cancer of pancreatics earlier to make a big difference,” Oberstein said.
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Fox News Digital’s Melissa Rudy contributed to this report.
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2025-03-17 19:19:00