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Cancer diagnosed before age 50 years, commonly referred to as early-onset or young-onset cancer, is an increasingly recognized global public health challenge, with rising incidence across multiple tumor types, including colorectal, breast, endometrial, thyroid, and other GI cancers. Adolescents and young adults (AYAs, age 15-39 years) represent a distinct developmental subgroup within this population. Emerging evidence suggests that birth cohort effects, lifestyle and metabolic risk factors, environmental exposures, and health system factors contribute to these rising trends, while delayed diagnosis, limited screening eligibility, and distinct tumor biology may result in more advanced disease at presentation. Beyond these characteristics, individuals diagnosed in adolescence, young adulthood, and in their 40s experience substantial psychosocial, developmental, and financial burdens that frequently persist into long-term survivorship. These challenges include high rates of psychological distress, fear of cancer recurrence, disruption of education and career trajectories, financial instability, caregiving strain, and altered life-course expectations. Reproductive health concerns and fertility preservation are central for many, particularly among AYAs, yet access to timely oncofertility counseling and services, including insurance coverage, remains inconsistent. Addressing the complex needs of this population requires integrated, multidisciplinary models of care that incorporate early detection strategies, developmentally tailored psychosocial support, fertility services, and coordinated survivorship care, with focused efforts to reduce structural and socioeconomic disparities. Continued research is needed to clarify the etiologic drivers of rising early-onset cancers and develop equitable interventions that improve survival outcomes and optimize long-term QOL for this growing population.
Bergerot et al. (Thu,) studied this question.