More getting cancer in Singapore but survival rates also up
While more people in Singapore are getting cancer, even more are surviving this killer disease longer, a recently released study has found.
Over 35 years, the proportion of men who survive a cancer diagnosis by at least five years has gone up from 13.2 percent in 1973 to 1977, to 48.5 percent in 2008 to 2012.
For the same period, women survivors more than doubled from 28 percent to 57.1 percent.
However, the monograph on Cancer Survival In Singapore 1973-2012, released on Sept 29, cautioned that the increased survival rates could be partly attributed to earlier detection of the cancers, which helps to “prolong” lives.
“Therefore, survival time can still increase even if there is no postponement of death,” it noted.
Article continues after this advertisementBetween 1973 and 2012, 163,331 people here were diagnosed with cancer and 110,899 have died.
Article continues after this advertisementBut there was improvement in survival for cancers diagnosed at different stages across the years.
Cancers in Singapore are generally detected later than in other developed countries, the study stated.
But it added: “Our treatment and cancer management is comparable to our international counterparts.”
Unhealthy lifestyles affect the chances of survival, it said.
“Risk factors such as tobacco smoking and obesity not only increase the incidence of cancers, but they can also lower survival among cancer patients.”
It gave the example of how cancer patients who smoke have a 38 percent higher risk of dying than non-smokers. Similarly, obese women with breast cancer are less sensitive to treatment.
The paper also compared cancer survival rates here against those of selected countries, with Singapore doing better for cancers of the rectum, cervix, uterus, ovary and bladder. But “more progress could be made” for lung, breast and prostate cancers, it added.
The chances of survival for breast cancer, the most common cancer in women here, were higher here than in Europe and China, but lag behind the United States, Japan and Australia.
Dr. Benita Tan, a senior breast surgeon at Singapore General Hospital, said women here are generally diagnosed at a later stage than women in other developed countries, leading to poorer survival rates.
Meanwhile, Dr. Chay Wen Yee of the National Cancer Centre said the good survival rates of cervical cancer patients were due to more women going for Pap smears, leading to the cancer being diagnosed early.
She said screening can prevent a woman from getting cervical cancer if abnormal growth is detected before it becomes cancerous.
As for colorectal cancer, colorectal surgeon Koh Poh Koon also said that earlier screening for the cancer is a major reason for better survival rates. But he added that screening for this cancer is “still not optimal, although more people are screening in 2012 compared to 2004.”
Screening can detect pre-cancerous polyps, which, if removed, will prevent the cancer from forming.
Dr. Koh, also an Ang Mo Kio GRC MP, said: “We should be removing more polyps rather than cancers.”
With more people going for screening regularly, he said the incidence of this cancer can be reduced, while more can be diagnosed in the early stages with much better survival chances.
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