What makes you more likely to get a second cancer?

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Tara Winstead, Pexels CC:0
Tara Winstead, Pexels CC:0

US researchers say some of the main influencing factors as to whether someone will develop a second cancer are being older at your initial diagnosis, and being male. Additionally, they found survivors of lung, bladder, and skin cancer were at a higher risk of developing new cancer. The team looked into data from over 3 million cancer survivors, which covered over five decades of national data and say this risk might also be influenced by your age, whether you had been exposed to radiation and/or chemotherapy, and ongoing lifestyle factors such as smoking, obesity and having a poor diet.

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From: PLOS

Age, sex, and cancer type influence risk of subsequent cancers among survivors


Findings may have implications for long-term cancer survivorship surveillance

Risk of developing a subsequent primary cancer varied significantly by age at initial diagnosis, sex, and type of first cancer, according to a study by Oxana Palesh and Susan Hong and colleagues at Virginia Commonwealth University, U.S., published April 28th in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine.

Advances in cancer detection and treatment have led to a growing population of cancer survivors. In the U.S., the number of cancer survivors is expected to grow by 22% over the next decade— from 18 million in 2025 to more than 22 million by 2035. Survivors remain at higher risk for developing new primary cancers distinct from their original diagnosis. This risk may be influenced by factors such as older age, exposure to radiation and/or chemotherapy and ongoing lifestyle factors like smoking, obesity and poor diet. Understanding who is at greater risk and how this risk changes over time can help to inform prevention and monitoring strategies.

Using retrospective data from more than 3 million cancer survivors in the U.S., researchers examined how demographic factors and cancer characteristics correlate with subsequent cancer risk. Several factors were associated with developing a subsequent cancer, including older age at initial diagnosis and male sex. In addition, survivors of lung, bladder, and skin melanoma were at higher risk of developing new cancer.

These findings reinforce the importance of long‑term survivorship care and risk‑based monitoring. By identifying survivor groups at heightened risk, studies like this can help to inform tailored prevention strategies, surveillance guidelines, and survivorship care planning as the cancer survivor population continues to grow.

First author Hui Cheng adds, “By examining nearly five decades of national data, we found population-level shifts in subsequent primary cancer risk, with several survivor groups experiencing rising risks. These findings can help design more tailored surveillance and prevention strategies.”

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PLOS Medicine
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Organisation/s: Virginia Commonwealth University, USA
Funder: This work was supported by the US National Cancer Institute (R01CA239714, R01CA172145, and R01CA226080 to OP). Additional support was provided by the National Cancer Institute (P30CA016059 to the Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center), which supplied infrastructure and shared resources used by the authors in conducting this study.
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