Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Advanced cancers returned to prepandemic levels, according to a reassuring report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2025 11:25 AM
  • Advanced cancers returned to prepandemic levels, according to a reassuring report

Many Americans were forced to postpone cancer screenings— colonoscopies, mammograms and lung scans — for several months in 2020 as COVID-19 overwhelmed doctors and hospitals.

But that delay in screening isn't making a huge impact on cancer statistics, at least none that can be seen yet by experts who track the data.

Cancer death rates continue to decline, and there weren't huge shifts in late diagnoses, according to a new reportpublished Monday in the journal Cancer. It's the broadest-yet analysis of the pandemic’s effect on U.S. cancer data.

In 2020, as the pandemic began, a greater share of U.S. cancers were caught at later stages, when they're harder totreat. But in 2021, these worrisome diagnoses returned toprepandemic levels for most types of cancer.

“It is very reassuring,” said lead author Recinda Sherman of the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries. “So far, we haven’t seen an excess of late-stage diagnoses," which makes it unlikely that there will be higher cancer death rates tied to the pandemic.

Similarly, the number of new cancer cases dropped in 2020, but then returned to prepandemic levels by 2021. The size of the 2020 decline in new cancers diagnosed was similar across states, despite variations in COVID-19 policy restrictions. The researchers note that human behavior and local hospital policies played more of a role than state policy restrictions.

Late-stage diagnoses of cervical cancer and prostate cancer did increase in 2021, but the shifts weren't large. The data analysis goes only through 2021, so it’s not the final word.

“We didn't see any notable shifts,” Sherman said. “So it’s really unlikely that people with aggressive disease were not diagnosed during that time period.”

The report was produced by the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries, the National Cancer Institute, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Cancer Society.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Tackle Dietary Changes By Taking Small Steps, Dietitians Of Canada Suggests

Tackle Dietary Changes By Taking Small Steps, Dietitians Of Canada Suggests
Dietitians of Canada is encouraging Canadians to take a small step toward better health during this year's annual Nutrition Month in March by picking an area to improve and making changes one meal at a time.

Tackle Dietary Changes By Taking Small Steps, Dietitians Of Canada Suggests

Alcohol In Pregnancy May Put Kids At Neurological Problems Risk

Alcohol In Pregnancy May Put Kids At Neurological Problems Risk
Mothers who consume alcohol during pregnancy put their children at the risk of impairment in kidney blood flow in adulthood and heightened neurological problems caused by a stroke, warns a study.

Alcohol In Pregnancy May Put Kids At Neurological Problems Risk

Alberta RCMP Want To Return Letters Written By A Woman And A Soldier During WW2

Alberta RCMP Want To Return Letters Written By A Woman And A Soldier During WW2
Mounties found a bundle of the hand-written letters in a stolen vehicle earlier this month in central Alberta.

Alberta RCMP Want To Return Letters Written By A Woman And A Soldier During WW2

Prof Researching Fear Of Childbirth In Women Who Request Cesarean Births

Prof Researching Fear Of Childbirth In Women Who Request Cesarean Births
A Prince Edward Island professor is conducting research in the hopes of better understanding what's behind the fear of childbirth as it relates to women who request a planned cesarean birth.

Prof Researching Fear Of Childbirth In Women Who Request Cesarean Births

Canadian Scientists Testing Zika To See If Virus Can Infect Native Mosquitoes

 Scientists suspect an outbreak of the Zika virus is behind a surge in a rare birth defect in Brazil. But how are they going to prove it?

Canadian Scientists Testing Zika To See If Virus Can Infect Native Mosquitoes

Binge Drinking May Increase Hypertension Risk In Youth

The study was published today in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

Binge Drinking May Increase Hypertension Risk In Youth