A new 10-year Cancer Strategy aims to significantly cut the number of people diagnosed with later stage cancer and to reduce the health inequalities associated with the disease.
Currently around 42% of cancers are diagnosed at the later stages but through continued investment in the Detect Cancer Earlier (DCE) Programme the ambition is to reduce the number diagnosed at stages III and IV in year 10 of the plan to 24%. That would mean around 5,000 fewer people diagnosed with later stage disease in the year 2033.
The strategy is underpinned by a three-year Cancer Action Plan that contains 136 actions. Both documents focus on improving all areas of cancer services, from prevention and diagnosis through to treatment and post-treatment care, with a particular focus on the currently less-survivable cancers.
Cancer remains the largest burden of disease across Scotland and has seen an ongoing increase in incidence. There were over 35,000 new cancers registered in 2021, an increase of 5.5% compared with 2019.
We are seeing reduced death rates, with an 11% reduction over the last 10 years. Data published in 2022 showed that, for adults who were diagnosed with cancer, more than two thirds of males (69%) and females (72%) survived for at least one year, and 44% of males and 51% of females survived for at least five years.
The earlier a person is diagnosed with cancer, the more likely they are to have a good outcome. In 2021, four out of five breast cancers (78%) were diagnosed at an early stage (I or II). In contrast, two-thirds of lung cancers (66%) and more than two in five colorectal cancers (44%) were diagnosed at a late stage (Stage III or IV).
I’m Graeme’s Parliamentary Assistant based at Holyrood, but I support his constituency work as well. Having been Caseworker to an Aberdeenshire MP some years prior, joining Graeme's team in 2019 was a return to this line of work from a role in fundraising.