Type 2 Diabetes Patients Are Diagnosed Late If The
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Early diagnosis is critical for positive outcomes in cancer. Although there is no effective cure for cancer, early diagnosis allows physicians to deploy treatments such as surgery, radiation and chemotherapy that can reduce the size of the tumor and increase life expectancy. Research shows that nearly one-half of people who develop cancer are diagnosed late, reducing the chances of successful treatment and limiting their survival chances.
A recent study by postdoctoral researcher Dr. Anna Jansana has revealed that people with type 2 diabetes are more likely to receive late diagnoses if they develop a type of cancer that isn’t screened for routinely.
Jansana is from the International Agency for Research on Cancer’s (IARC) Nutrition and Cancer Multimorbidity Group. During her presentation at the 13th European Breast Cancer Conference, Jansana noted that while bowel and breast cancer screening is publicly available in several countries, other types of cancer such as prostate, lung and ovarian tumors aren’t routinely screened.
As a result, people with type 2 diabetes are more likely to be diagnosed with these types of cancer once they had become advanced and metastasized to other parts of the body.
She said that the study’s results underscored the need to pay close attention to patients who have already been diagnosed with metabolism, heart or blood vessel diseases to ensure cancer symptoms are identified while the disease is still in its infancy. This would increase the chances of treatment succeeding and increase the patient’s life expectancy.
Jansana and her team drew data from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study, reviewing 11,945 cancer cases among 400,577 participants. The data set covered cases that had been diagnosed from 1992 to 2012. The researchers found that of the 11,945 participants, 87% did not have a cardiometabolic disease when they received their cancer diagnosis, 5% of the participants had pre-existing cardiovascular disease when they were diagnosed, 7% had type 2 diabetes, and 1% had both type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Furthermore, participants who had type 2 diabetes were 26% more likely to be diagnosed with cancer late compared to those who did not have pre-existing cardiometabolic conditions.
Jansana noted that breast and colorectal cancers seemed to be diagnosed before they had metastasized regardless of the presence or absence of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Still, she stated that their results indicated that policymakers should consider expanding their health policies and recommendations to cover patients with cardiometabolic diseases during cancer screenings.
Such timely diagnosis can pave the way for medications developed by entities such as QSAM Biosciences Inc. (OTCQB: QSAM) to be used to manage the cancer and increase the survival rates of the affected patients.
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