29.2% drop in death rates since 1999

You’re less likely to die of cancer today than you were a generation ago.

True, you could’ve said the same thing 20 years ago and 40 years ago. But the gains made against cancer during the first two decades of the 21st century are so profound – and so unexpected given other trends that should be leading to more cancer deaths, not fewer – that some experts are talking again about the idea that cancer could be cured.

The Centers for Disease Control issued a report in June that crunched a range of U.S. cancer statistics collected during the first two decades of this century. The data track how roughly two dozen types of cancer played out in hundreds of locales, and they measure disease outcomes for all Americans based on gender, age and race.

It’s a complex study, but the bottom line is simple:

Cancer isn’t as lethal as it used to be.

In fact, the report’s key finding is that the U.S. cancer death rate was about a third (29.2%) lower in 2022 than it was in 1999.

“I don’t know if I’d have had the same outcome if I’d been diagnosed 20 years earlier, or even six months earlier,” said Tasha Champion, an Apple Valley resident who was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer in 2016, a day before she turned 36.

“I can’t say if cancer treatment, overall, has changed. I wasn’t involved in it before. But I’m glad to be where I am now, which I’m positive is because of the treatment I got at the time,” she said.

“A lot more people, like me, seem to be winning.”

Like much of the CDC report, the death rate, which strips away population growth, is a number that tells a very human story. At the turn of the century, cancer was killing 200.7 out of every 100,000 Americans, but by 2022 the number was down to 142. In a city the size of Burbank (population 104,000) that translates to about 60 lives saved per year. In a nation the size of the United States, population 333 million, that translates to about 3 million lives saved since 2000.

The agency also looked at the geography of cancer, tracking trends by state, county and even congressional district. In California, cancer deaths are running about 10% lower than the national average and the state’s gains in cancer mortality since 2000 match the gains made nationally.

County-level cancer numbers in the report cover only a five-year window ending in 2022, so it’s tough to track long-term trends. But, locally, those numbers also paint a mostly upbeat picture. People living in Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside counties are all less likely than other Americans to die of cancer, and the cancer death rate in San Bernardino County is within the margin of error for matching the national average.

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All of which isn’t to suggest the story of cancer in America is only about numbers.

Oncologists and other experts and even some patients, like Champion, say every gain against cancer has involved some combination of human tenacity and intelligence and imagination. That formula, they add, can be applied to everyone from lab-bound researchers to patients volunteering for clinical trials.

And just as cancer isn’t a single disease (but is, instead, a constellation of diseases in which the bad actor cells tend to behave in a similar fashion) experts note there’s no single reason why the fight against cancer is going well.

For that, they point to changes and advances and trends that range from the obvious to the obscure.

The anti-smoking campaigns of the 1980s and ’90s are paying off in fewer cancer deaths in the 2000s. And while the Human Genome Project, which launched in the 1990s, didn’t lead to a cancer cure, as was once suggested, it did spin off other research that translated into DNA- and RNA-based ways to detect and treat many common types of cancer.

Even new laws – hikes in tobacco and alcohol taxes and municipal codes that limit the use of tobacco in public places – have led to fewer cancer deaths.

“We are finally seeing results from all the years of research and investment, and from patients participating in (cancer) research,” said Dr. Ed Kim, an oncologist who works as physician-in-chief and senior vice president for City of Hope Orange County, a branch of the Duarte-based cancer research center.

Kim, like others who’ve been working in cancer research and treatment since the 1990s, described a series of changes – some profound, some subtle – that have hit his profession over the past two decades.

Some drugs once used only for patients with advanced cancers have been deemed safe and effective for more people, boosting survivor rates. Biomarker testing – a genetic-based science that can help link specific treatments to specific cancers – has improved mortality numbers even though its widespread use is fairly new. Even some procedures that have been around for decades – surgical removal, for instance – are being used in new ways.

Overall, Kim described an evolving world in which cancer treatment is shifting from something akin to a broad, impersonal war – the blunt use of chemicals and weapons against mysteriously raging cancer cells – into something more like a series of criminal investigations, with genetics and other evidence used to solve individual cases of cancer.

“It’s a new era,” he said.

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