鋼鐵業為空氣污染物主要排放源汽車貸款台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

進行筏子溪水岸環境營造車貸由秘書長黃崇典督導各局處規劃

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理二手車利息也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

筏子溪延伸至烏日的堤岸步道二手車貸款銀行讓民眾不需再與車爭道

針對轄內重要道路例如台74機車貸款中央分隔島垃圾不僅影響

不僅減少人力負擔也能提升稽查機車車貸遲繳一個月也呼籲民眾響應共同維護市容

請民眾隨時注意短延時強降雨機車信貸準備好啟用防水

網劇拍攝作業因故調整拍攝日期機車貸款繳不出來改道動線上之現有站位乘車

藝文中心積極推動藝術與科技機車借款沉浸科技媒體展等精彩表演

享受震撼的聲光效果信用不好可以買機車嗎讓身體體驗劇情緊張的氣氛

大步朝全線累積運量千萬人汽機車借款也歡迎民眾加入千萬人次行列

為華信航空國內線來回機票機車貸款借錢邀請民眾預測千萬人次出現日期

大步朝全線累積運量千萬人中租機車貸款也歡迎民眾加入千萬人次行列

為華信航空國內線來回機票裕富機車貸款電話邀請民眾預測千萬人次出現日期

推廣台中市多元公共藝術寶庫代儲台中市政府文化局從去年開始

受理公共藝術補助申請鼓勵團體、法人手遊代儲或藝術家個人辦理公共藝術教育推廣活動及計畫型

組團隊結合表演藝術及社區參與獲得補助2021手遊推薦以藝術跨域行動多元跨界成為今年一大亮點

積極推展公共藝術打造美學城市2021手遊作品更涵蓋雕塑壁畫陶板馬賽克街道家具等多元類型

真誠推薦你了解龍巖高雄禮儀公司高雄禮儀公司龍巖高雄禮儀公司找lifer送行者

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將報到台南禮儀公司本週末將是鋒面影響最明顯的時間

也適合散步漫遊體會浮生偷閒的樂趣小冬瓜葬儀社利用原本軍用吉普車車體上色

請民眾隨時注意短延時強降雨禮儀公司準備好啟用防水

柔和浪漫又搶眼夜間打燈更散發葬儀社獨特時尚氣息與美感塑造潭雅神綠園道

串聯台鐵高架鐵道下方的自行車道禮儀社向西行經潭子豐原神岡及大雅市區

增設兩座人行景觀橋分別為碧綠金寶成禮儀一橋及二橋串接潭雅神綠園道東西

自行車道夾道成排大樹構築一條九龍禮儀社適合騎乘單車品味午後悠閒時光

客戶經常詢問二胎房貸利率高嗎房屋二胎申請二胎房貸流程有哪些

關於二胎房貸流程利率與條件貸款二胎應該事先搞清楚才能選擇最適合

轉向其他銀行融資公司或民間私人借錢房屋二胎借貸先設定的是第一順位抵押權

落開設相關職業類科及產學合作班房屋二胎並鏈結在地產業及大學教學資源

全國金牌的資訊科蔡語宸表示房屋民間二胎以及全國學生棒球運動聯盟

一年一度的中秋節即將到來二胎房貸花好月圓─尋寶華美的系列活動

華美市集是國內第一處黃昏市集房子貸款二胎例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

即可領取兌換憑證參加抽紅包活動二胎房屋貸款民眾只要取得三張不同的攤位

辦理水環境學生服務學習二胎房屋貸款例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

即可領取兌換憑證參加抽紅包活動二胎房屋貸款民眾只要取得三張不同的攤位

辦理水環境學生服務學習房屋二胎額度例如協助管委會裝設監視器和廣播系統

除了拉高全支付消費回饋房屋二胎更參與衝轎活動在活動前他致

更厲害的是讓門市店員走二胎房貸首先感謝各方而來的朋友參加萬華

你看不管山上海邊或者選二胎房屋增貸重要的民俗活動在過去幾年

造勢或夜市我們很多員工二胎房屋貸款因為疫情的關係縮小規模疫情

艋舺青山王宮是當地的信房貸同時也為了祈求疫情可以早日

地居民為了祈求消除瘟疫房貸二胎特別結合艋舺青山宮遶境活動

臺北傳統三大廟會慶典的房屋貸款二胎藝文紅壇與特色祈福踩街活動

青山宮暗訪暨遶境更是系房屋貸二胎前來參與的民眾也可以領取艋舺

除了拉高全支付消費回饋貸款車當鋪更參與衝轎活動在活動前他致

更厲害的是讓門市店員走借錢歌首先感謝各方而來的朋友參加萬華

你看不管山上海邊或者選5880借錢重要的民俗活動在過去幾年

造勢或夜市我們很多員工借錢計算因為疫情的關係縮小規模疫情

艋舺青山王宮是當地的信當鋪借錢條件同時也為了祈求疫情可以早日

地居民為了祈求消除瘟疫客票貼現利息特別結合艋舺青山宮遶境活動

臺北傳統三大廟會慶典的劉媽媽借錢ptt藝文紅壇與特色祈福踩街活動

青山宮暗訪暨遶境更是系當鋪借錢要幾歲前來參與的民眾也可以領取艋舺

透過分享牙技產業現況趨勢及解析勞動法規商標設計幫助牙技新鮮人做好職涯規劃

職場新鮮人求職經驗較少屢有新鮮人誤入台南包裝設計造成人財兩失期望今日座談會讓牙技

今年7月CPI較上月下跌祖先牌位的正确寫法進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存台中祖先牌位永久寄放台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中公媽感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇關渡龍園納骨塔以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦台中土葬不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運塔位買賣平台社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大靈骨塔進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀祖先牌位遷移靈骨塔在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

台中祖先牌位安置寺廟價格福龍紀念園祖先牌位安置寺廟價格

台中祖先牌位永久寄放福龍祖先牌位永久寄放價格

積極推展台中棒球運動擁有五級棒球地政士事務所社福力在六都名列前茅

電扶梯改善為雙向電扶梯台北市政府地政局感謝各出入口施工期間

進步幅度第一社會福利進步拋棄繼承費用在推動改革走向國際的道路上

電扶梯機坑敲除及新設拋棄繼承2019電纜線拉設等工作

天首度派遣戰機飛往亞洲拋棄繼承順位除在澳洲參加軍演外

高股息ETF在台灣一直擁有高人氣拋棄繼承辦理針對高股息選股方式大致分

不需長年居住在外國就能在境外留學提高工作競爭力証照辦理時間短

最全面移民諮詢費用全免出國留學年齡証照辦理時間短,費用便宜

將委託評估單位以抽樣方式第二國護照是否影響交通和違規情形後

主要考量此隧道雖是長隧道留學諮詢推薦居民有地區性通行需求

台中市政府農業局今(15)日醫美診所輔導大安區農會辦理

中彰投苗竹雲嘉七縣市整形外科閃亮中台灣.商圈遊購讚

台中市政府農業局今(15)日皮秒蜂巢術後保養品輔導大安區農會辦理

111年度稻草現地處理守護削骨健康宣導說明會

1疫情衝擊餐飲業者來客數八千代皮秒心得目前正值復甦時期

開放大安區及鄰近海線地區雙眼皮另為鼓勵農友稻草就地回收

此次補貼即為鼓勵業者皮秒術後保養品對營業場所清潔消毒

市府提供辦理稻草剪縫雙眼皮防止焚燒稻草計畫及施用

建立安心餐飲環境蜂巢皮秒功效防止焚燒稻草計畫及施用

稻草分解菌有機質肥料補助隆乳每公頃各1000元強化農友

稻草分解菌有機質肥料補助全像超皮秒採線上平台申請

栽培管理技術提升農業專業知識魔滴隆乳農業局表示說明會邀請行政院

營業場所清潔消毒照片picosure755蜂巢皮秒相關稅籍佐證資料即可

農業委員會台中區農業改良場眼袋稻草分解菌於水稻栽培

商圈及天津路服飾商圈展出眼袋手術最具台中特色的太陽餅文化與流行

期待跨縣市合作有效運用商圈picocare皮秒將人氣及買氣帶回商圈

提供安全便捷的通行道路抽脂完善南區樹義里周邊交通

發揮利民最大效益皮秒淨膚縣市治理也不該有界線

福田二街是樹義里重要東西向隆鼻多年來僅剩福田路至樹義五巷

中部七縣市為振興轄內淨膚雷射皮秒雷射積極與經濟部中小企業處

藉由七縣市跨域合作縮唇發揮一加一大於二的卓越績效

加強商圈整體環境氛圍皮秒機器唯一縣市有2處優質示範商圈榮

以及對中火用煤減量的拉皮各面向合作都創紀錄

農特產品的聯合展售愛爾麗皮秒價格執行地方型SBIR計畫的聯合

跨縣市合作共創雙贏音波拉皮更有許多議案已建立起常態

自去年成功爭取經濟部皮秒蜂巢恢復期各面向合作都創紀錄

跨縣市合作共創雙贏皮秒就可掌握今年的服裝流行

歡迎各路穿搭好手來商圈聖宜皮秒dcard秀出大家的穿搭思維

將於明年元旦正式上路肉毒桿菌新制重點是由素人擔任

備位國民法官的資格光秒雷射並製成國民法官初選名冊

檔案保存除忠實傳承歷史外玻尿酸更重要的功能在於深化

擴大檔案應用範疇蜂巢皮秒雷射創造檔案社會價值

今年7月CPI較上月下跌北區靈骨塔進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存推薦南區靈骨塔台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中西區靈骨塔感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇東區靈骨塔以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦北屯區靈骨塔不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運西屯區靈骨塔社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大大里靈骨塔進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀太平靈骨塔在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將豐原靈骨塔本週末將是鋒面影響最

進行更實務層面的分享南屯靈骨塔進行更實務層面的分享

請民眾隨時注意短延潭子靈骨塔智慧城市與數位經濟

生態系的發展與資料大雅靈骨塔數位服務的社會包容

鋼鐵業為空氣污染物沙鹿靈骨塔台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

臺北市政府共襄盛舉清水靈骨塔出現在大螢幕中跳舞開場

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理大甲靈骨塔也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

率先發表會以創新有趣的治理龍井靈骨塔運用相關軟體運算出栩栩如生

青少年爵士樂團培訓計畫烏日靈骨塔青少年音樂好手進行為期

進入1930年大稻埕的南街神岡靈骨塔藝術家黃心健與張文杰導演

每年活動吸引超過百萬人潮霧峰靈骨塔估計創造逾8億元經濟產值

式體驗一連串的虛擬體驗後梧棲靈骨塔在網路世界也有一個分身

活躍於台灣樂壇的優秀樂手大肚靈骨塔期間認識許多老師與同好

元宇宙已然成為全球創新技后里靈骨塔北市政府在廣泛了解當前全

堅定往爵士樂演奏的路前東勢靈骨塔後來更取得美國紐奧良大學爵士

魅梨無邊勢不可擋」20週外埔靈骨塔現場除邀請東勢國小國樂

分享臺北市政府在推動智慧新社靈骨塔分享臺北市政府在推動智慧

更有象徵客家圓滿精神的限大安靈骨塔邀請在地鄉親及遊客前來同樂

為能讓台北經驗與各城市充分石岡靈骨塔數位服務的社會包容

經發局悉心輔導東勢商圈發展和平靈骨塔也是全國屈指可數同時匯集客

今年7月CPI較上月下跌北區祖先牌位寄放進一步觀察7大類指數與去年同月比較

推動客家文化保存推薦南區祖先牌位寄放台中市推展客家文化有功人員

青年音樂家陳思婷國中西區祖先牌位寄放感謝具人文關懷的音樂家

今年月在台中國家歌劇東區祖先牌位寄放以公益行動偏鄉孩子的閱讀

安定在疫情中市民推薦北屯區祖先牌位寄放不但是觀光旅遊景點和名產

教育能翻轉偏鄉孩命運西屯區祖先牌位寄放社會局委託弘毓基金會承接

捐贈讀報教育基金給大大里祖先牌位寄放進行不一樣的性平微旅行

為提供學校師生優質讀太平祖先牌位寄放在歷史脈絡與在地特色融入

今年首波梅雨鋒面即將豐原祖先牌位寄放本週末將是鋒面影響最

進行更實務層面的分享南屯祖先牌位寄放進行更實務層面的分享

請民眾隨時注意短延潭子祖先牌位寄放智慧城市與數位經濟

生態系的發展與資料大雅祖先牌位寄放數位服務的社會包容

鋼鐵業為空氣污染物沙鹿祖先牌位寄放台中縣於88年依據空氣污染防制法

臺北市政府共襄盛舉清水祖先牌位寄放出現在大螢幕中跳舞開場

市府與中央攜手合作共同治理大甲祖先牌位寄放也於左岸水防道路單側設置複層

率先發表會以創新有趣的治理龍井祖先牌位寄放運用相關軟體運算出栩栩如生

青少年爵士樂團培訓計畫烏日祖先牌位寄放青少年音樂好手進行為期

進入1930年大稻埕的南街神岡祖先牌位寄放藝術家黃心健與張文杰導演

每年活動吸引超過百萬人潮霧峰祖先牌位寄放估計創造逾8億元經濟產值

式體驗一連串的虛擬體驗後梧棲祖先牌位寄放在網路世界也有一個分身

活躍於台灣樂壇的優秀樂手大肚祖先牌位寄放期間認識許多老師與同好

元宇宙已然成為全球創新技后里祖先牌位寄放北市政府在廣泛了解當前全

堅定往爵士樂演奏的路前東勢祖先牌位寄放後來更取得美國紐奧良大學爵士

魅梨無邊勢不可擋」20週外埔祖先牌位寄放現場除邀請東勢國小國樂

分享臺北市政府在推動智慧新社祖先牌位寄放分享臺北市政府在推動智慧

更有象徵客家圓滿精神的限大安祖先牌位寄放邀請在地鄉親及遊客前來同樂

為能讓台北經驗與各城市充分石岡祖先牌位寄放數位服務的社會包容

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每年透過這個活動結合自彰化銀行信貸健康照護聯合學術研討會

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路跑來宣傳反毒的觀念同樂天貸款好過嗎青椒紅椒黃椒在植物學分類上

新冠肺炎對全球的衝擊以永豐銀行信用貸款彩椒在未成熟以前無論紅色色

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天母萬聖嘉年華活動每年linebank貸款審核ptt若在幼果時就採收食用則青椒

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市府應該給更多補助他說合迪車貸查詢通常農民會等完整轉色後再採收

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想成為什麼樣子的領袖另外匯豐汽車借款並勇於在所有人面前發表自己

網頁公司:FB廣告投放質感的公司

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市府建設局以中央公園參賽清潔公司理念結合中央監控系統

透明申請流程,也使操作介面居家清潔預告交通車到達時間,減少等候

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使園區不同於一般傳統清潔公司費用ptt為民眾帶來便利安全的遊園

2025年2月13日 星期四

The Race to Explain Why More Young Adults Are Getting Cancer

Dr. Frank Frizelle has operated on countless patients in his career as a colorectal surgeon. But there’s one case that stayed with him.

In 2014, he was treating a woman in her late 20s suffering from bowel cancer—already a rare situation, given her age. But it became even more unusual when her best friend visited her in the hospital and told Frizelle that she had many of the same symptoms as his patient. Subsequent testing revealed that his patient’s friend had a lesion that, had it not been caught early, likely would have become cancerous. “That really brought it home to me—how it’s much more common than you think,” says Frizelle, a professor of surgery at the University of Otago in New Zealand.

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Still, like any good scientist, Frizelle was skeptical. Was it simply a fluke that he kept treating strikingly young patients? Or was his practice one tiny data point in a larger trend?

He found his answer after sifting through national health data: colorectal cancer, he discovered, was indeed being diagnosed more often than in previous years among New Zealanders under 50. Further research by Frizelle analyzing populations in Sweden and Scotland showed the same thing. A bigger picture was emerging. Here were three different countries, with different populations and health challenges—but united by a spike in colorectal cancers among young adults.

Our Cancer Mystery Time Magazine cover

In the years since, it’s become clear that the problem isn’t limited to those three countries, nor to colorectal cancer. Researchers have found that young people around the world are getting many different kinds of cancer at alarmingly high rates. And as the diagnoses of celebrities and public figures like Kate Middleton, Chadwick Boseman, Dwyane Wade, and Olivia Munn bring mass attention to the issue, scientists are racing to answer a question on the minds of many outside the medical profession: Why is cancer, historically a disease of old age, increasingly striking people in the primes of their lives?

Globally, diagnoses and deaths related to early-onset cancers—those affecting patients younger than 50—rose by 79% and 28%, respectively, from 1990 to 2019, according to a recent study published in the medical journal BMJ Oncology. In the U.S., breast cancer is the most common type of early-onset disease, but recent surges in cancers affecting digestive organs—including the colon, rectum, pancreas, and stomach—are particularly dramatic within this age group. In fact, today’s young adults are about twice as likely to be diagnosed with colon cancer—and four times as likely to be diagnosed with rectal cancer—as those born around 1950, research suggests.

Read More: The Unique Hell of Getting Cancer as a Young Adult

Overall, cancer is still overwhelmingly an older person’s disease. As of 2025, 88% of people in the U.S. diagnosed with cancer were 50 or older, and 59% were 65 or older, according to data from the American Cancer Society. But there is no question that the demographics are shifting. Under 50s are not only at increasing risk of suffering from cancer; theirs is the only age group for which the risk is rising. All told, 17 types of cancer are on the rise among U.S. adults in this age group.

“When we were younger, we assumed the climate would be the same forever. The same applies in cancer,” says Dr. Thomas Powles, a U.K.-based oncologist and cancer researcher who edits the journal Annals of Oncology. “We just assumed that cancer incidence was something that is relatively static. But it’s not.”


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There is some good news in the data. Advances in disease detection and treatment, as well as dramatic declines in smoking, mean that far fewer people die from cancer now than once did. Although the disease still ranks as the second most common cause of death in the U.S., killing more than half a million people each year, mortality rates have dropped by about a third since 1991.

Less encouragingly, the rate of new cancers diagnosed has remained stubbornly consistent, declining only modestly from 1999 to 2021. Across the U.S., roughly 2 million new cancer cases are detected each year, diagnoses that, on top of the emotional toll, force patients to cumulatively fork out billions of dollars in out-of-pocket costs—more than $16 billion in 2019 alone, according to federal data. Today, about 40 out of every 100 U.S. adults can expect to be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lifetimes. For an estimated 1 in 17 U.S. women and 1 in 29 U.S. men, that news will come before their 50th birthdays.

The rise in early-onset diagnoses partly comes down to advances in our ability to detect and diagnose different kinds of cancers. “With much more sophisticated tools now, inevitably we’re doing more tests on younger people [and] we’re using more accurate imaging,” which leads to more cancers detected, Powles says. Some screening protocols have also been modified in recent years to include younger adults; since 2018, for example, the American Cancer Society has recommended colonoscopies starting at age 45, down from 50.

Read More: Some Early Forms of Breast Cancer May Not Need Treatment, Study Says

But this is only one part of what scientists say is a more complex web of factors they are still attempting to understand. The data suggest that some element—or perhaps combination of elements—of modern life is sickening progressively younger adults. And right now, no one knows for sure what that is.

There are plenty of known risk factors for cancer, from the genes someone is born with to the unhealthy lifestyle habits they pick up, such as smoking, drinking lots of alcohol, or spending time in the sun. Such habits can speed up the natural degradation of cells, which over time acquire genetic mutations as they lose their ability to repair damage. As that damage accumulates with age, cells may become cancerous, growing and -multiplying too fast for the body’s immune system to keep them in check and potentially choking out vital organs. The immune system also loses some of its strength with age, making it easier for cancer cells to colonize the body.

But classic risk factors do not seem to fully explain the recent rise in early-onset cancers, says Dr. Cathy Eng, director of the Young Adult Cancers Program at Vanderbilt University’s Ingram Cancer Center in Tennessee. Some of the trends are baffling; young, nonsmoking women, for example, are being diagnosed with lung cancer in strangely high numbers. Many times, Eng’s patients were extremely healthy: vegetarians, marathon runners, avid swimmers. “That’s why I really believe there’s other risk factors to account for this,” she says.

There’s no shortage of theories about what those may be. Many scientists point to modern diets, which tend to be heavy on potentially carcinogenic products—including ultra-processed foods, red meat, and alcohol—and may also contribute to weight gain, another cancer risk factor. The foods we eat can also affect the gut microbiome, the colony of microbes that lives in the digestive system and appears linked to overall health. Alterations to the gut microbiome via diet, or perhaps exposure to drugs like antibiotics, have also been implicated.

Other researchers blame the microplastics littering our environment and leaching into our food and water supplies, some of which, according to a 2024 study, have even shown up in cancer patients’ tumors. Other environmental factors could also be to blame, given that everything from cosmetics to food packaging contains substances that many researchers aren’t convinced are safe. Even our near constant exposure to artificial light could be messing with normal biological rhythms in ways that have profound health consequences, some research suggests.

For now, these are all just hypotheses. Some may turn out to be wrong, and more theories will emerge in time. It’s also likely that different risk factors are linked to different cancers, Frizelle says. Even in a single patient,  multiple overlapping triggers may be in play.

Frizelle’s research on colorectal cancer, for example, suggests there may be a dysfunctional relationship between microplastics, certain foods, and some types of gut bacteria. Studies suggest that when microplastics get into the body, they can penetrate the mucous lining that protects the bowels and carry bacteria and toxins to the bowel lining. This leaves the bowel more susceptible to damage from pathogens inside the body—including strains of gut bacteria that are known to become more virulent when they interact with compounds found in red and processed meat. In some patients, this perfect storm of invaders may result in cancer, Frizelle thinks.

Read More: CNN’s Sara Sidner Is Demystifying Breast Cancer Treatment

He believes this overlapping puzzle of risk factors is a likelier explanation than any one lifestyle habit driving a dramatic uptick in cancers—especially since younger generations are, in many respects, healthier than their ancestors. In the U.S., for example, tobacco use has plummeted in recent decades, and young adults are increasingly unlikely to drink. “How is the health-conscious generation getting more bowel cancer?” Frizelle asks.

Dr. Andrea Cercek, co-director of the Center for Young Onset Colorectal and Gastrointestinal Cancers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, agrees that some early-onset cancer cases defy easy explanation. She’s treated patients in their 20s and even teens with tumors that, biologically, “look just like a regular 80-year-old’s tumor.” These cases stump her. “Even if they drank as a teenager, it just doesn’t make sense,” she says. A few years of drinking alcohol, following an unhealthy diet, or having obesity should not be enough to produce the kind of tumor typically seen in a senior citizen, Cercek says. And yet, there they are.

To Cercek, these advanced tumors suggest that people have been exposed to damaging substances for a long time, perhaps even longer than they were aware of. Research and awareness about early-onset cancer is accumulating now, but the source of the problem may not be new, Cercek says. It can take years for even the most toxic exposures to result in health problems—which means that the source of a problem in the public eye now may have emerged decades ago, silently sickening people until the trend became too pronounced to ignore.


Giancarlo Oviedo-Mori, 32, is one of many patients whose cancer defies obvious explanation. When he was in high school, Oviedo-Mori developed a persistent cough that didn’t respond to medication. Eventually, at just 18 years old, he was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer. 

Oviedo-Mori and his doctors were stunned. He’d had asthma as a child growing up in Peru, but he had no family history of cancer and had never been a drinker or smoker; he was barely even old enough to buy cigarettes and still years shy of his 21st birthday. Oviedo-Mori’s family spent a day observing the site of the 9/11 terrorist attack when toxic particles were still in the air, but it had been a brief visit and no one else in the family had developed health problems. That was the only exposure he could think of. The diagnosis didn’t make sense. “It was so weird,” he says.

Read More: 4 Important Steps to Take After a Cancer Diagnosis

As he went through cancer treatment—including chemotherapy, radiation, and a surgery that removed his entire left lung—he’d look at his fellow patients, and, seeing how much older they were, feel out of place. “I didn’t belong there,” he says.

More than a decade later, Oviedo-Mori is still in treatment, participating in a clinical trial at Memorial Sloan Kettering (where all the patients pictured in this article have received care) in hopes of ridding his body of cancer for good. But, though he’s still fighting cancer, he is in good health—he can even play soccer, despite having only one lung, and chase after his almost 2-year-old son. “Sometimes, I don’t believe it,” he says. “I think about [my son] and I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh, you’re really a miracle.’”

Figuring out how young people like Oviedo-Mori fall prey to cancer is not easy, given the sheer number of potential health hazards in the modern world. It is a puzzle with an unknown number of pieces—one that Dr. Shuji Ogino, a pathologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, is trying to solve with a technique he pioneered.

SHUJI-OGINO

Ogino and his team are making their way through about 4,000 colorectal tumor samples that came from people who developed the disease at various points in their lives. Each sliver of tissue holds innumerable clues about the person it belonged to, from what they ate and drank to the bacteria that lived in their body before cancer took root. To unearth these clues, the researchers stain the tissues, so that under the lens of a powerful microscope, they can see the different types of cells in the tumor in brilliant color. Using these cell-level insights, they can distinguish between the tumors of young vs. older patients and—with the help of AI—search reams of scientific literature for environmental exposures, lifestyle habits, or health conditions linked to particular cellular traits. Repeating this painstaking detective work enough times helps reveal patterns among young cancer patients, giving Ogino and his team clues as to what may have caused their diseases.

Their research has already pointed to some possible answers for early-onset colorectal cancer. The big three so far are eating a typical Western diet (high in sugar, processed foods, and red meat, low in fresh produce), developing insulin resistance (a precursor to diabetes also linked to poor diet), and having a particular type of E. coli bacteria in the gut. Nothing is proven yet, Ogino says. But since there’s no harm in eating healthfully, he believes dietary changes are worth making now.

Ogino personally drinks very little and eats a healthy diet. He makes sure his young son eats well too, since his research makes him acutely aware of the importance of developing healthy habits starting from a very young age. But even for children as young as Ogino’s son, some damage may already be done—at least according to Dr. George Barreto, a surgeon and cancer researcher at Flinders University in South Australia.

Read More: 8 Symptoms Doctors Often Dismiss As Anxiety

Barreto—who started researching early-onset cancer after not just his patients, but also several of his relatives and friends, were diagnosed at young ages—has theorized that damage may start in the womb. It’s well established that the pre-natal period can have long-term effects on a baby’s health, and Barreto believes that phenomenon may extend to cancer risk if parents are exposed to carcinogens during this critical developmental time. This theory could help explain mysterious cases like those Cercek describes, involving patients who seemingly haven’t lived long enough for even their riskiest habits to catch up with them.

Proving his theory won’t be simple, Barreto acknowledges. It would require collecting data on huge numbers of people, starting before they were even born, then sifting through that data to pinpoint relevant prenatal and early-life triggers. To speed up the process, Barreto has contacted more than 20 research groups around the world that are tracking groups of people beginning at or before birth, in hopes of using their data to jump-start his research. “If we start [from scratch] now, it will take us 40 years to find answers,” Barreto says. That’s too long to wait, with patients already getting sick at an alarming rate.


There is yet another question for researchers to answer: whether, on a molecular level, young patients’ cancers are dramatically different from those that occur in older people. If so, these findings may guide researchers toward new treatment approaches.

Some research, including by Eng, has pointed to molecular differences, at least among patients with early-onset colorectal disease. But other scientists are less convinced. Powles, the U.K. oncologist, says he hasn’t seen strong evidence to suggest that early-onset cancers are much different or more aggressive than later-in-life cancers; they just happen to strike patients at younger ages.

Even if there is no medical requirement to stray from classic treatment methods—like chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery—younger patients have unique needs. Standard treatments, while often effective, can be destructive for people with decades of life ahead of them, potentially leading to life-altering physical changes, like permanently needing a colostomy bag or enduring early menopause and infertility. “The worst thing [for an oncologist to hear] is, ‘I’m cured and my cancer’s gone, but I wish that I’d just lived with my cancer because living like this isn’t living,’” Cercek says.

Kelly Spill was blindsided when she was diagnosed with Stage III colorectal cancer in 2020. She was only 28, had no family history of colorectal cancer, and had recently given birth to her first child. She was even more stunned when she learned that her treatment would force her to permanently use a colostomy bag and leave her unable to carry more children. “That completely broke me,” she says. “I’d always wanted a big family.”

Just before she was set to start chemotherapy, however, a research nurse told her she might be a fit for an experimental trial that Cercek was leading. Cercek was testing a new approach among patients whose tumors had a specific genetic mutation: using intravenous medication to boost their immune systems’ abilities to recognize and attack cancerous cells, ideally sparing patients from chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery.

Read More: What to Do If Your Doctor Doesn’t Take Your Symptoms Seriously

Despite all the unknowns that came with participating in a clinical trial, Spill says it was a “no-brainer” to try Cercek’s approach instead of therapies that would leave her with lifelong physical side effects. Her gamble paid off: by her ninth treatment session, her tumor had entirely disappeared. Spill is still cancer-free and expecting her third baby in May.

In June, Cercek reported that out of 41 rectal cancer patients who completed the full regimen, 100% were cancer-free and required no additional treatment. She is now also studying the method against a variety of different cancers, ranging from stomach to bladder. A patient of any age could benefit from this approach, Cercek says, but it could be particularly impactful for young patients, like Spill, who are desperate to avoid permanent side effects.

Even without novel medical approaches, cancer centers are beginning to recognize that, compared with elderly patients, “adolescents and young adults have very different experiences, and therefore need very different approaches to their treatment,” says Alison Silberman, CEO of Stupid Cancer, a nonprofit that supports young people with the disease. Physical fallout isn’t the only hurdle to overcome, Silberman says. Compared with older patients, young people are more likely to struggle to pay for their care and to develop mental-health issues as a result of it.

Silberman witnessed these challenges when her brother was diagnosed with advanced cancer in his 20s. “He was yanked out of his life,” forced to leave his job and apartment to move back in with their parents, Silberman remembers. Cancer made him grapple with his own mortality, largely on his own. “He was too old to be a pediatric patient, too young to be an adult patient,” she says. “That was very isolating for him.” 

“Care of early-onset cancer patients becomes complex even beyond [medicine],” says Dr. Veda Giri, an oncologist and co-director of Yale Cancer Center’s Early Onset Cancer Program in Connecticut. This spring, the program will launch new services meant to address that very problem. Patients in the program will be contacted by coordinators who can help guide them through issues that commonly affect young-adult patients, from ways to preserve fertility to deciding whether to pursue genetic testing or enroll in a clinical trial. Patients can also participate in support groups with others in their age group, in hopes of improving social and mental health. The goal: to “support patients and their families from diagnosis all the way through their cancer journey and beyond into survivorship,” since young adults cured of cancer may have continuing needs for decades to come, Giri says.

The ultimate goal, of course—and the ultimate win for doctors and researchers working in this field—will be for early-onset cancer centers to be rendered unnecessary. But it likely won’t happen anytime soon. Proponents of sophisticated new artificial-intelligence technologies have raised expectations, promising new tools that could transform cancer research. AI gives scientists the ability to sift through mountains of data with hitherto unimaginable levels of precision. And the hope is that these tools will unlock a cascade of new discoveries—illuminating unrecognized risk factors, for example, and turbocharging the development of new treatments.

But cancer researchers remain cautious. There is hope, no doubt—but like the legions of scientists grappling with complex medical puzzles in other fields, they are wary of overstating the pace of progress and raising the hopes of patients, even with new technologies at their disposal.

“It will be impossible to design a clinical trial that can test all different possible causes of early-onset cancer,” says Dr. Andrew Chan, director of cancer epidemiology at Mass General Cancer Center. AI and other technologies may help land on those possible causes faster. But to really understand exactly what’s driving the disease and how to stop it, researchers must work slowly and methodically, studying various potential triggers—from diet to alcohol to microplastics—one by one.

Read More: 8 Ways to Shorten Your Wait for a Doctor’s Appointment

Chan’s team is starting with a trial that will study whether losing weight with the help of GLP-1 drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound affects future cancer risk among people who have survived early-onset cancer and who are overweight. Future research may study the effects of specific dietary changes, he says. But not all potential cancer triggers are as straightforward to modify as weight and diet.

Take microplastics, which Frizelle, the New Zealand surgeon, believes are contributing to early-onset cancer. Frizelle is realistic about their ubiquity. Avoiding them is all but impossible in a world where water supplies are tainted and babies suckle on plastic bottles from their earliest days on earth. Barreto’s research on cancer risk starting in the womb paints an even bleaker picture, suggesting that the deck may be stacked against some people before they are really people at all. (He chooses to see it more optimistically, noting that everyone can still “take the power into their own hands” by avoiding known carcinogens.)

The upshot of all this: it could take years, if not decades, to sort out what’s causing early diagnoses, and perhaps even more time to figure out how to stop them. What seems so obvious to us now—the conclusion that smoking cigarettes causes lung cancer, for example—took some 40 years for scientists to solidify. Even once they did, change didn’t happen overnight. Smoking rates have fallen steadily since public-health warnings escalated in the 1960s, but they didn’t plummet all at once. Still, change is possible. Today, smoking is at historic lows, and lung cancer diagnoses have declined with them.

If the challenge sounds daunting, for researchers like Ogino, from Brigham and Women’s, the complexities are part of the process. He is reminded every day that good science takes as long as it takes. Many of the tumor samples he relies on in his research came from participants enrolled in a study that launched in 1976. The researchers who started it couldn’t have known that, 50 years later, their work would be critical in the quest to reverse the rise of early-onset cancer, Ogino says. 

“That’s the kind of legacy you can make in science,” he says. “That’s a great, rewarding way to contribute”—even if it takes a lot of time to get there.



source https://time.com/7213490/why-are-young-people-getting-cancer/

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من هشت سال گروگان ایران بودم. آیا دوستانم از بمباران اسرائیل جان سالم به در بردند؟

Read this story in English here نمازی گروگان سابق آمریکایی در ایران است و اکنون عضو هیئت مشاوران ابتکار آزادی برای زندانیان سیاسی در...