'Concerning': CRC Continues to Shift Toward Younger Adults
Nearly half of new colorectal cancer cases now occur in people aged < 65 years, highlighting the need for earlier screening and better symptom awareness.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) in the United States continues to move in two different directions — decreasing in older adults and rising in younger adults, especially in those aged 20-49 years, according to the latest statistics from the American Cancer Society (ACS).
The ACS report, published online earlier this month, revealed that CRC incidence rates declined by 2.5% annually in adults aged ≥ 65 years but increased by 3% annually in adults aged 20-49 between 2013 and 2022 — higher than earlier estimates of 1% to 2% annual increases.
The trends are “concerning” and a “stark reminder that we’re seeing a shifting epidemiology,” said Folasade (Fola) May, MD, PhD, MPhil, director of the gastroenterology quality improvement program at UCLA Health in Los Angeles, who wasn’t involved in the analysis.
The report highlights the need for better education and symptom awareness — including bleeding, iron deficiency symptoms, and changes in bowel habits — among patients and doctors, who may not routinely consider cancer in younger adults, May explained.
“Because so many of the young people diagnosed present with advanced stage disease, early workup is critical to saving lives,” she said.
Rapidly Changing Landscape
In the United States, CRC is the third-most commonly diagnosed cancer in both men and women. CRC is also the second-leading cause of cancer-related deaths and the leading cause in adults aged < 50 years.
“After decades of progress, the risk of dying from colorectal cancer is climbing in younger generations of men and women, confirming a real uptick in disease because of something we’re doing or some other exposure,” Rebecca Siegel, MPH, senior scientific director of surveillance research at ACS and lead author of the report, said in a statement.
For the latest CRC statistics report, ACS scientists analyzed population-based registries, including the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program, and mortality data from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.
The report estimated that 158,850 new CRC cases will be diagnosed in the US in 2026, including 108,860 colon cancers and 49,990 rectal cancers; an estimated 55,230 people will die from the disease.
Overall, CRC incidence declined by 0.9% annually from 2013 to 2022, driven by decreases of 2.5% per year in adults aged ≥ 65 years. During the same period, however, incidence rates rose by about 3% per year in adults aged 20-49 years and by 0.4% per year in those aged 50-64 years. CRC mortality also continued to trend downward in adults aged ≥ 65 years by > 2% per year, but mortality increased by 1% per year in adults aged < 50 years since 2004 and in adults aged 50-64 years since 2019.
Nearly half of new CRC cases (45%) now occur in adults aged < 65 years, up from 27% in 1995, illustrating a major shift toward younger age groups, the authors said. Half of early-onset cases occur in people aged 45-49 years who are now eligible for screening, and 3 of 4 early-onset CRC cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage, including about 27% with distant metastases.
“This is partly because of less screening, but it also reflects diagnostic delays,” according to Siegel and coauthors, who noted data show screening uptake remains low in individuals aged 45-49 (37%) and 50-54 (55%) years. The incidence of early-onset CRC increased across all racial and ethnic groups in the US, from 2% annually in Black individuals to 4% annually in Hispanic individuals between 2013 and 2022.
Aside from early-onset trends, the analysis found that tumor location trends shifted as well. Rectal cancer incidence increased in all ages combined (by 1% per year from 2018 to 2022), reversing decades of decline and now accounting for nearly one third of all CRC, compared with 27% in the mid-2000s.
The report also indicated that racial and ethnic disparities persist. Alaska Native individuals had the highest CRC incidence (80.9 per 100,000) and mortality (31.5 per 100,000) in the US, more than twofold that of White patients (35.2 and 12.9 per 100,000, respectively). Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and other Pacific Islanders had the lowest incidence (28.5 per 100,000) and mortality rates (9.2 per 100,000).
Although cancer registries like SEER are not perfect, they are “the best data we have” and overall the SEER data “very reliably represent what is going on in the US population,” May said.
The latest findings also further underscore that CRC is “worsening among younger generations and highlight the immediate need for eligible adults to begin screening at the recommended age of 45,” William Dahut, MD, ACS chief scientific officer, said in the statement.
The study had no commercial funding. The authors and May reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
