Tag Directory / CANCERSCREENING     showing 1–20 of 22   RSS



American Cancer Society Reports Latest Global Cancer Statistics; Cancer Cases Approach 21 Million Worldwide, With Burden Projected to Surge 67% by 2050

cancer - New data reveal stark geographic inequities and call for urgent global action on prevention, early detection, and equitable treatment access

AI Summary: The American Cancer Society published updated global cancer statistics showing cases near 21 million and projecting a steep rise by midcentury, highlighting shifting incidence patterns and growing health system strain. The report calls for intensified prevention, screening and investment in equitable cancer control to blunt the projected surge.


GLOBOCAN and ACS: New global cancer estimates and projections

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Regional responses: conferences, national programs, and research

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Survival gaps: breast, GI, GU cancers and immunotherapy access

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WHO 2026 Global Cancer Report: Urgent calls for action

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AACR Report on Cancer Disparities and Health Equity

oncodaily - American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) shared a post on LinkedIn: “The AACR Cancer Disparities Progress Report 2026 is now available. The report outlines the myriad factors that drive and […]

AI Summary: The American Association for Cancer Research released a progress report detailing persistent gaps in cancer outcomes across race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status and geography. It documents uneven access to screening, trials and treatments, calls for targeted funding, workforce diversity and policy fixes, and urges measurable equity goals—because apparently pointing out the problem is step one.


AACR report release and leadership outreach

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Policy push: briefings, funding calls, and trial equity

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Jeremy Clarkson’s Prostate Cancer Story: Early Detection, Treatment, and Remission

oncodaily - Jeremy Clarkson has revealed that he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that was caught early. The broadcaster shared the diagnosis in the final episodes of Clarkson’s […]

AI Summary: Jeremy Clarkson publicly revealed an aggressive prostate cancer diagnosis, underwent early detection and treatment, and is now in remission. The case highlights the value of prompt screening and modern therapies — and proves even TV personalities can be very boringly human when faced with routine medicine.

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Early-onset cancers are on the rise: Knowing family history is crucial

medicalxpress - In the U.S., more than a dozen kinds of cancer are on the rise in adults under 50. Among these early-onset cancers, colorectal and breast cancers have increased the most, and colorectal cancer is now the deadliest cancer for Americans ages 18 to 49.

AI Summary: New analyses show early‑onset cancers are increasing and reinforce that detailed family history remains a key tool for risk assessment and targeted screening. Experts urged clinicians and health systems to prioritize family‑history collection and cascade testing to catch at‑risk individuals sooner and reduce preventable morbidity.


Breast cancer risk: AI tools, polygenic scores, prevention

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Colorectal cancer: rising cases and screening gaps worldwide

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Faster biological aging linked to early-onset cancer rise

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Inherited cancer risk and genomics driving early diagnoses

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Ultrasensitive blood test predicts head and neck cancer relapse months earlier

medicalxpress - A new study by investigators from Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute has found that an ultrasensitive blood test called HPV-DeepSeek could help identify which people with HPV-associated head and neck cancer still had cancer cells in their bodies after …

AI Summary: Researchers validated an ultrasensitive HPV whole‑genome sequencing blood assay that detects minimal residual disease after surgery for HPV‑positive head and neck cancer, flagging relapse months before clinical signs. Early detection could enable earlier salvage therapy and closer surveillance, potentially changing follow‑up care and improving outcomes for this patient group.

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Untreated Cancer, Festering Infections: Immigrant Detainees Detail Medical Care Lapses

Rae Ellen Bichell / kffhealthnews - Get our weekly newsletter, The Week in Brief, featuring a roundup of our original coverage, Fridays at 2 p.m. ET.

AI Summary: Investigations and interviews reveal immigrant detainees across multiple US facilities endured medical neglect, including untreated cancers and worsening infections. Detainees describe delayed diagnoses, inadequate care and systemic lapses that exacerbated serious conditions, prompting calls for stronger oversight, accountability and immediate reforms to protect vulnerable patients rather than paperwork and excuses.

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American Cancer Society Updates Colorectal Cancer Screening Guideline: Major Changes Emphasize Blood-Based and At-Home Stool Testing

cancer - ACS researchers aim to reduce colorectal cancer deaths by offering options to improve screening participation

AI Summary: American Cancer Society revised colorectal screening guidelines, elevating at‑home stool testing and clarifying the role of blood‑based assays. Recommendations stress broader access to noninvasive stool tests while urging cautious, limited use of blood tests where appropriate, aiming to expand screening uptake without sacrificing diagnostic accuracy or overwhelming follow‑up resources.


ACS guideline update: expanding stool tests, cautious blood-test role

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Blood-based detection and ctDNA: trials shaping screening and treatment

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Simple blood test could lead to personalized lung cancer treatment

medicalxpress - A single blood test could help doctors predict how lung cancer patients will respond to treatment before therapy begins, researchers have found. University of Queensland-led research focused on non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the most common form of t…

AI Summary: Researchers describe a circulating cell-free methylated DNA liquid biopsy that can detect and track lung cancer by reading tumor-specific methylation patterns in blood. The minimally invasive test aims to guide personalized treatment choices, enable earlier detection of recurrence, and reduce dependence on tissue biopsies—basically doing the diagnostic heavy lifting while you sip your coffee.


Blood tests for monitoring and personalizing lung cancer care

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MCED trials and clinical benefit debate

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Methylation liquid biopsy methods and applications

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Adding a Lower Cutoff Value for CA19-9 May Identify Additional High-risk Cases of Pancreatic Cancer

Kathleen Medora / aacr - CA19-9 is a biomarker whose levels often correlate with pancreatic cancer stage and prognosis PHILADELPHIA – A dual-threshold model for measuring the pancreatic tumor marker serum carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA19-9) identified patients with pancreatic canc…

AI Summary: Researchers propose lowering the CA19‑9 threshold to identify additional patients at high risk for pancreatic cancer. The analysis indicates the new cutoff improves detection of potentially dangerous cases without an unmanageable rise in false positives, offering a straightforward diagnostic tweak that could prompt earlier workups and treatment decisions.

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Skin cancer cases hit record high in the UK

Sydney Ghazarian / cancerresearchuk - New analysis shows that melanoma skin cancer rates in the UK have reached a new high of 20,000 cases per yearThe post Skin cancer cases hit record high in the UK appeared first on Cancer Research UK - Cancer News.

AI Summary: The UK has recorded its highest-ever number of skin cancer cases, with an alarming rise in the most dangerous presentations. Public health experts point to changing sun behaviours and inadequate sun protection as likely contributors. The surge signals strain on dermatology services and a need for clearer messaging—because sunscreen confusion apparently remains a public health hobby.

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Kicking Off the Cancer Planners Forum in Geneva – UICC

oncodaily - Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) shared a post on LinkedIn: “We’re excited to kick off the Cancer Planners Forum in Geneva today! Convening national leaders responsible for cancer control planning, […]

AI Summary: The UICC Cancer Planners Forum in Geneva brought policymakers, clinicians, and public‑health leaders together to map national cancer control strategies, prioritize cervical cancer elimination, and foster implementation partnerships. The forum emphasized practical planning, stakeholder engagement, and resource‑sensitive solutions to turn plans into measurable improvements in prevention, screening, and care delivery.


Cervical cancer elimination and clinical partnerships

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Forum launch and wrap-up in Geneva

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National cancer planning and policy priorities

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Blog Post
The Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) convened the Cancer Planners Forum in Geneva, bringing together national cancer-control leaders, policymakers, clinicians and public‑health experts to advance practical planning and implementation. UICC reported 120 participants from 54 countries, including 45 cancer planners from 42 countries. Over the course of the forum — described by participants including UICC President‑Elect Zainab Shinkafi‑Bagudu, McCabe Centre’s Hayley Jones, and Pfizer’s Jennifer Young — delegates worked to map national cancer control strategies, prioritize cervical cancer elimination, and build implementation partnerships. The meeting emphasized stakeholder engagement and resource‑sensitive, operational approaches to turn plans into measurable improvements in prevention, screening and care delivery. UICC announced the forum both at its kickoff and on conclusion as a successful convening of planners and partners.

When should you get a mammogram? Conflicting advice makes it hard to know

medicalxpress - Deciding when to get routine mammograms is confusing. Some health groups recommend women begin at age 40 or 45 while another recently opted for age 50. They also differ on whether yearly or every other year is best.

AI Summary: Conflicting guidance about when to start and how often to perform mammography continues to confuse patients and clinicians, complicating shared decision‑making. Experts urge individualized risk assessment and clearer communication of benefits and harms to reduce both undertreatment and unnecessary anxiety, because apparently screening schedules enjoy being controversial.


Patient confusion over mammogram timing

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Risk-based screening: AI and trials

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USPSTF political shake-up threatens screening guidance

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National study examines genetic testing to inform follow-up care for cancer survivors

medicalxpress - Hundreds of thousands of people diagnosed with cancer are still alive today but were never genetically tested, either because testing was not available or was not routinely offered at the time of their diagnosis. These patients are just as likely as those…

AI Summary: A national study has been launched to assess whether genetic testing can refine follow-up care for cancer survivors, tailoring surveillance to individual risk and potentially reducing unnecessary tests. The large-scale effort seeks to integrate genomic data into survivorship plans to better predict late effects and allocate resources to those most likely to benefit.


Building survivorship standards, care and advocacy

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Conferences, research and personalized cancer survivorship insights

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National genetic-testing study and genomic implications for survivors

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AI, face photos may predict cancer survival: Mass General Brigham study

Giles Bruce / beckershospitalreview - Using multiple photos from across a patient’s course of treatment in the FaceAge AI tool may be an even better predictor of survival than a single photo alone, a new Mass General Brigham study found. Researchers behind FaceAge, which uses AI to analyze a …

AI Summary: An AI model trained on clinical cohorts at Mass General Brigham can estimate biological aging from simple facial photos and links accelerated facial aging to poorer cancer survival. The research suggests noninvasive image-based signals could complement standard prognostic markers, offering a surprising, low-cost way to flag higher-risk patients earlier.

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11 cancers on the rise in young people - scientists find first clue why it's happening

bbc - Researchers stress that simple lifestyle changes can still significantly reduce the risk of cancer.

AI Summary: New studies report rising incidence of several cancers among younger adults, with England data showing increases in bowel and ovarian cancers and researchers claiming early clues to underlying drivers. Scientists are calling for urgent investigation into environmental, lifestyle, and diagnostic factors, enhanced surveillance and prevention measures — because apparently youth is no longer a guarantee.


New lab discoveries point to targeted, immune-based cancer therapies

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Other health stories: infections, liver care, social impacts on youth

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Prevention and screening gaps risk late diagnoses, experts warn

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Younger adults facing rising cancers — investigators hunt environmental culprits

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A machine learning model that uses DNA methylation patterns may help identify the origin of cancers of unknown primary

medicalxpress - A machine learning model analyzing CpG-based DNA methylation accurately predicted the origin of many different cancer types in patients with cancers of unknown primary (CUP), according to research presented at the American Association for Cancer Research …

AI Summary: A machine‑learning model trained on DNA methylation signatures can assign tissue‑of‑origin for cancers of unknown primary with promising accuracy. The approach could speed diagnosis, guide therapy choices and reduce reliance on invasive tests—handy when a tumor refuses to tell doctors where it came from.


ctDNA and AI for treatment monitoring and early detection

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Liquid biopsies and extracellular vesicles for early cancer detection

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Methylation-based ML to identify cancers' tissue of origin

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Cancer Risk Is Significantly Higher for Adults Who Never Married, Large Study Finds

oncodaily - Analysis of 4 million cases finds higher cancer rates across most types, especially for preventable cancers. Adults who have never been married face a significantly higher risk of developing cancer […]

AI Summary: A large observational analysis found that adults who never married have a significantly higher cancer risk compared with married peers, after adjusting for common confounders. Researchers highlight social, behavioral and access‑to‑care factors as possible contributors, suggesting that relationship status may serve as a marker for targeted prevention and support interventions.


Lifestyle, sleep and fertility linked to cancer risk

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Never-married adults face significantly higher cancer risk

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Place, education and loneliness drive cancer disparities

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UCLA Researchers Develop Low-Cost Blood Test to Detect Multiple Cancers And Other Diseases From a Single Sample

oncodaily - The new method analyzes genome-wide methylation of DNA circulating in the bloodstream to detect liver, lung, ovarian and stomach cancers, as well as several non-cancer conditions. UCLA scientists have developed […]

AI Summary: Researchers at UCLA introduced a low-cost blood test capable of detecting multiple cancers and other diseases from a single sample, promising broader screening reach and earlier detection. If validated at scale, the technology could lower barriers to multi-cancer screening, reshape diagnostic pathways, and offer cheaper, simpler surveillance—assuming the usual caveats about follow-up testing and false positives.


Frontline: ctDNA and cfDNA - monitoring, screening, and reliability questions

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On location: early-detection debates, AI risk stratification and screening value

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On the ground: UCLA’s inexpensive blood test expands multi-disease detection

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Uveal Melanoma: ESMO–EURACAN Clinical Practice Guideline

esmo - This ESMO–EURACAN CPG provides key recommendations for the diagnosis, staging, treatment and follow-up for uveal melanoma. It includes percutaneous hepatic perfusion and tebentafusp as treatment options for metastatic disease, reflecting emerging evidence…

AI Summary: ESMO–EURACAN released a comprehensive clinical practice guideline for uveal melanoma covering diagnosis, staging, surveillance and systemic management. The guidance clarifies best practices for multidisciplinary care, risk stratification and therapeutic sequencing, aiming to standardize treatment and follow‑up for a rare but high‑risk ocular tumour.

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Bowelbabe Fund celebrates raising £20m by announcing the Bowelbabe Vaccine

Sophie Wedekind / cancerresearchuk - The Bowelbabe Fund has raised more that £20 million and has announced the next wave of funded projects, including the Bowelbabe Vaccine.The post Bowelbabe Fund celebrates raising £20m by announcing the Bowelbabe Vaccine appeared first on Cancer Research U…

AI Summary: The Bowelbabe Fund celebrated a £20 million fundraising milestone and unveiled plans for a Bowelbabe Vaccine initiative, drawing high‑profile support. Organizers framed the cash infusion as a catalyst for prevention and research efforts, while public endorsements highlighted momentum — and the fundraising thermometer that finally stopped making them blush.

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