Trends in Early-Onset Colorectal Adenocarcinoma and Neuroendocrine Tumors Across Racial and Ethnic Groups
Charmi Patel, Yazan Abboud, Rohan Karkra, Imran Qureshi, Paul Gaglio, Vivek Lingiah, Ahmed Al-Khazraji, Kaveh Hajifathalian

TL;DR
Early-onset colorectal cancer is rising fastest among American Indian/Alaska Native and Hispanic groups, with neuroendocrine tumors increasing more rapidly than adenocarcinomas.
Contribution
The study reveals distinct racial/ethnic trends in early-onset colorectal cancer and highlights the importance of analyzing tumor subtypes separately.
Findings
EOCRC incidence increased most rapidly among American Indian/Alaska Native populations.
Neuroendocrine tumors showed faster growth rates compared to adenocarcinomas across all racial and ethnic groups.
Mortality from EOCRC increased among American Indian/Alaska Native and Hispanic populations but decreased among Black individuals.
Abstract
Background: Early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC), defined as diagnosis before age 50, is increasing despite declining colorectal cancer (CRC) rates among older adults. Emerging evidence suggests widening racial and ethnic disparities. We aimed to characterize long-term EOCRC incidence and mortality trends across racial and ethnic groups in the United States with comparisons by tumor subtype. Methods: We conducted a population-based analysis using United States Cancer Statistics data (2001–2021) for EOCRC incidence and National Center for Health Statistics data (2000–2022) for mortality. Analyses were stratified by race/ethnicity and histology. Trends were quantified using average annual percent change (AAPC) with 95% confidence intervals (Cis). Results: Among 474,601 early-onset adenocarcinoma (EO-ADC) cases, incidence increased in all racial and ethnic groups except Non-Hispanic Black…
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Taxonomy
TopicsColorectal Cancer Screening and Detection · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Genetic factors in colorectal cancer
