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Cancer death rates fall
steadily in the US, with more survivors than ever |
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More people are surviving cancer than
ever before in the United States, according to a new report from the American
Association for Cancer Research. In the past three years, the
number of cancer survivors in the US – defined as living people who have had
a cancer diagnosis – increased by more than a million. There are 18 million
survivors in the US as of January, and that number is expected to grow to 26
million by 2040, the association said. The report notes that there were only
3 million US cancer
survivors in 1971. Declines in smoking and
improvements in catching and treating cancer early are driving the change,
according to the AACR Cancer Progress Report 2022,
released last week. Dr. Lisa Coussens, president of
the association, said in a statement that part of the
credit goes to an investment in research – both for treatments and for
understanding the disease. “Targeted therapies,
immunotherapy, and other new therapeutic approaches being applied clinically
all stem from fundamental discoveries in basic science,” Coussens said.
“Investment in cancer science, as well as support for science education at
all levels, is absolutely essential to drive the next wave of discoveries and
accelerate progress.” Increased funding for cancer
research is a cornerstone of President Joe Biden’s relaunched Cancer Moonshot
initiative. Biden – who lost a son to brain cancer – said this month that his goal is to cut
cancer death rates in the United States by at least half in the next 25
years. |

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