UK Health
Radio – Medical News Update on the Hour
Cancer
Survival Rates Improving.
The BBC has reported that most people diagnosed
with cancer in England in recent years are surviving for longer, according to
the latest statistics. Eighty per cent of those with breast, prostate and skin
cancer are living for five years after diagnosis. The figure is 90% for
testicular cancer. Recently diagnosed prostate cancer patients will see a large
improvement in their hopes of survival.
The Office for National Statistics published the
figures.
The report estimated the chances of people
surviving for one year and for five years after being diagnosed with cancer in
England based on survival rates for 24 different common cancers diagnosed
between 2008 and 2013.
It found survival improving for the majority of
cancers, with survival generally higher in women.
For people with cancers diagnosed in 2013, the
greatest improvement in survival chances will be in men with prostate cancer -
from 83.6% to 87.6%.
High survival rates for prostate cancer and breast
cancer are thought to be due to the increasing number of men and women getting
their cancer diagnosed and treated early.
Other lesser-known cancers also showed promising
improvements in the chances of survival.
For women with myeloma, or cancer of the white
blood cells, there was a rise in five-year survival from 41.6% for those
diagnosed in 2007-2011 to 46.2% for diagnosis between 2008 and 2012.
There were also large increases in survival chances
for men with myeloma and men with leukaemia.
While some cancers have a good prognosis, others
"remain extremely poor", the ONS report says.
Five-year survival estimates for cancers of the
brain, lung, liver, pancreas and stomach are all below 19% for men and 22% for
women.
Pancreatic cancer for both men and women has a
survival rate of just 5.4% - the lowest in both sexes.
Nick Ormiston-Smith, head of statistical
information at Cancer Research UK, said more people were surviving cancer then
ever before "thanks to better treatments, earlier diagnosis and greater
awareness".
"But the story's not so positive for all types
of cancer," he said.
"Lung, pancreatic, oesophageal cancer and
brain tumours still have relatively low survival rates, partly because they
tend to be diagnosed at a later stage when they're much harder to treat."
He added: "We're working to beat all cancers
sooner, increasing our research into cancers with lower survival rates and
boosting our investment to help diagnose cancer earlier - accelerating progress
to save more lives."
Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio – Medical News Update on the Hour
Kindly sponsored by 1-stop-health-shop.com
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