Increasing cancer rates among young adults
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ASPartOfMe
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How young cancer survivors navigate dating, fertility and health
Quote:
Gwen Schmidt was just 21 when she was diagnosed with stage four colorectal cancer. Doctors said her chance of survival was just 5%.
“I was scared, completely terrified,” said Schmidt, now 35. “It was like everything that I had known up until that point was just gone almost in an instant.”
Schmidt was like any other college student, dividing time among friends, studying and going to parties. After she noticed blood in her toilet, she went to the doctor and got the devastating diagnosis.
Cancer was once considered a disease of aging, but a 2020 study led by researchers at the Penn State Cancer Institute found that rates of all cancers among this younger age group have risen 30% since the 1970s.
Schmidt is one of over a million adolescents and young adults, ages 15-39, who are diagnosed with cancer every year worldwide, according to research. The number is expected to grow.
Scientists aren’t sure why, but it's most likely connected to better screening, as well as lifestyle factors like obesity, lack of exercise and alcohol.
With improvement in cancer therapies, an estimated 86% of young adults diagnosed with cancer are expected to survive, according to the National Cancer Institute. That means more young people are dealing with the aftermath of the disease.
“Once you finish the active treatment, like the surgeries and the chemotherapy, that’s when the hardest part comes,” said Schmidt, who survived through multiple operations, radiation and chemotherapy. “Because then you have to sit with your new reality and figure out what that looks like now.”
That reality can be an emotional and physical roller coaster. Research has found that young cancer survivors had a higher risk of 24 health problems, including heart failure, kidney and liver disease, hearing loss and even stroke. They also face unique challenges in navigating dating after cancer, school and careers — and potentially decades of nerve-wracking screenings and scans to determine whether the cancer has returned or whether lifesaving treatment has triggered other diseases.
A growing number of hospitals and cancer centers nationwide are launching programs targeted at adolescents and young adults. Patients in such programs get counseling, personalized screening and, most important, a much-needed sense of community with other young people.
What it’s like dating after cancer
One of the most daunting aspects of surviving cancer as a young adult is getting back into the dating scene, especially when treatment has affected fertility, experts say.
“How do I disclose this huge thing that happened to me to someone that I just started dating?” asked psychologist Stacy Sanford, a co-director of the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Northwestern Medicine. “In some relationships it can even cause conflict, because it’s hard being a caregiver, and some people aren’t equipped to do that.”
Dr. Annah Abrams, a psychiatrist and the director of the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, advises young patients about how to talk to their dates about cancer.
“It doesn’t have to be the opening line when you’re meeting someone and talking with them,” she said. “But on that second or that third date, if it feels like somebody that you want to connect with further, it’s going to be important to have that as part of your conversation.”
For Schmidt, getting back into dating was terrifying. The chemotherapy and the surgery that kept her alive destroyed her ability to have a biological child.
“I spoke to this guy, and I told him I can’t have kids of my own, and he said, ‘I can’t continue dating you, because having biological children is really important to me,’” she said. “I said OK, thanks for being honest with me.”
She eventually met Noah, whom she married 10 years after the diagnosis. And with help from Northwestern Medicine, she had her daughter, Vivian, through surrogacy nine months ago.
Long-term risks from cancer treatment
Historically, there has been limited research on the long-term effects of young adult cancer survivors compared to other age groups, experts say. Health problems can develop years later, because the treatment required to survive can damage our organs, said Dr. Stephanie Smith, a pediatric oncologist and adviser to the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Stanford Medicine.
“Changes in heart function, heart valve disorders, both related to radiation, as well as certain chemotherapies, can impact the function of the heart over time,” she said.
Some young cancer patients, particularly those treated with the chemotherapy drug cisplatin, may experience permanent hearing loss because of damage to the inner ear, for example.
Radiation, which kills cancer cells and shrinks tumors, can, unfortunately, raise the risk of developing leukemia and breast, lung and pancreatic cancer, according to the American Cancer Society.
Because of that, doctors at adolescent and young adult cancer centers are following a specialized set of guidelines developed specifically for young cancer survivors.
’Scanxiety’
One of the biggest sources of distress for young survivors is spending the rest of their lives wondering whether the cancer will come back. Years of follow-up testing can trigger what some call “scanxiety,” and young adults diagnosed with cancer can be more prone to psychological distress than older adults with cancer, data suggests.
Sanford of Northwestern helps young survivors work through fear using a form of psychotherapy called acceptance and commitment therapy, in which she helps them with the uncertainty that their cancer might come back.
“Suffering with the unknown is hard for people, and there’s no real fix to that,” Sanford said. “Sometimes it’s about letting go of the unknown and focusing on what’s right in front of you. That’s what we have the most control of.”
“I was scared, completely terrified,” said Schmidt, now 35. “It was like everything that I had known up until that point was just gone almost in an instant.”
Schmidt was like any other college student, dividing time among friends, studying and going to parties. After she noticed blood in her toilet, she went to the doctor and got the devastating diagnosis.
Cancer was once considered a disease of aging, but a 2020 study led by researchers at the Penn State Cancer Institute found that rates of all cancers among this younger age group have risen 30% since the 1970s.
Schmidt is one of over a million adolescents and young adults, ages 15-39, who are diagnosed with cancer every year worldwide, according to research. The number is expected to grow.
Scientists aren’t sure why, but it's most likely connected to better screening, as well as lifestyle factors like obesity, lack of exercise and alcohol.
With improvement in cancer therapies, an estimated 86% of young adults diagnosed with cancer are expected to survive, according to the National Cancer Institute. That means more young people are dealing with the aftermath of the disease.
“Once you finish the active treatment, like the surgeries and the chemotherapy, that’s when the hardest part comes,” said Schmidt, who survived through multiple operations, radiation and chemotherapy. “Because then you have to sit with your new reality and figure out what that looks like now.”
That reality can be an emotional and physical roller coaster. Research has found that young cancer survivors had a higher risk of 24 health problems, including heart failure, kidney and liver disease, hearing loss and even stroke. They also face unique challenges in navigating dating after cancer, school and careers — and potentially decades of nerve-wracking screenings and scans to determine whether the cancer has returned or whether lifesaving treatment has triggered other diseases.
A growing number of hospitals and cancer centers nationwide are launching programs targeted at adolescents and young adults. Patients in such programs get counseling, personalized screening and, most important, a much-needed sense of community with other young people.
What it’s like dating after cancer
One of the most daunting aspects of surviving cancer as a young adult is getting back into the dating scene, especially when treatment has affected fertility, experts say.
“How do I disclose this huge thing that happened to me to someone that I just started dating?” asked psychologist Stacy Sanford, a co-director of the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Northwestern Medicine. “In some relationships it can even cause conflict, because it’s hard being a caregiver, and some people aren’t equipped to do that.”
Dr. Annah Abrams, a psychiatrist and the director of the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, advises young patients about how to talk to their dates about cancer.
“It doesn’t have to be the opening line when you’re meeting someone and talking with them,” she said. “But on that second or that third date, if it feels like somebody that you want to connect with further, it’s going to be important to have that as part of your conversation.”
For Schmidt, getting back into dating was terrifying. The chemotherapy and the surgery that kept her alive destroyed her ability to have a biological child.
“I spoke to this guy, and I told him I can’t have kids of my own, and he said, ‘I can’t continue dating you, because having biological children is really important to me,’” she said. “I said OK, thanks for being honest with me.”
She eventually met Noah, whom she married 10 years after the diagnosis. And with help from Northwestern Medicine, she had her daughter, Vivian, through surrogacy nine months ago.
Long-term risks from cancer treatment
Historically, there has been limited research on the long-term effects of young adult cancer survivors compared to other age groups, experts say. Health problems can develop years later, because the treatment required to survive can damage our organs, said Dr. Stephanie Smith, a pediatric oncologist and adviser to the adolescent and young adult cancer program at Stanford Medicine.
“Changes in heart function, heart valve disorders, both related to radiation, as well as certain chemotherapies, can impact the function of the heart over time,” she said.
Some young cancer patients, particularly those treated with the chemotherapy drug cisplatin, may experience permanent hearing loss because of damage to the inner ear, for example.
Radiation, which kills cancer cells and shrinks tumors, can, unfortunately, raise the risk of developing leukemia and breast, lung and pancreatic cancer, according to the American Cancer Society.
Because of that, doctors at adolescent and young adult cancer centers are following a specialized set of guidelines developed specifically for young cancer survivors.
’Scanxiety’
One of the biggest sources of distress for young survivors is spending the rest of their lives wondering whether the cancer will come back. Years of follow-up testing can trigger what some call “scanxiety,” and young adults diagnosed with cancer can be more prone to psychological distress than older adults with cancer, data suggests.
Sanford of Northwestern helps young survivors work through fear using a form of psychotherapy called acceptance and commitment therapy, in which she helps them with the uncertainty that their cancer might come back.
“Suffering with the unknown is hard for people, and there’s no real fix to that,” Sanford said. “Sometimes it’s about letting go of the unknown and focusing on what’s right in front of you. That’s what we have the most control of.”
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Gee, ya think it may be the ENVIRONMENT we continue to pollute with who-knows-what?
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goldfish21
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mrpieceofwork wrote:
Gee, ya think it may be the ENVIRONMENT we continue to pollute with who-knows-what?
It's mostly the environment inside out own bodies that we pollute with who knows what that we ingest vs. breathing car exhaust or whatever.
Food has been replaced with food-like-products loaded with a chemical shitstorm of carcinogenic crap, preservatives, synthetic garbage, gmos/glyphosate etc, physical work & exercise has been virtually eliminated, and people drink far too much alcohol - throwing fuel on the fire.
It's what's inside, not outside.
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No
Or both. And/Or, there's also "inhaling" stuff (and I was thinking of all the irradiated substances that now exist because of all the accidents and such) (like all of it combined... then Young people are "blank slates" so to speak... yada yada yada)
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My text only website
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