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Cancer is the public's biggest health concern, poll reveals

Two-thirds of the public say they are very or somewhat worried about being told they have cancer– higher than for any other medical condition, including dementia and having a heart attack – according to polling released today.

radiotherapy patient and two nurses in scanning room
A radiotherapy patient

The survey highlights the public's hopes for the future of cancer research and care:

  • Late detection is the biggest worry in relation to cancer diagnosis, with 55% of people wanting to see future advances in early cancer detection
  • The public overwhelmingly support the use of AI to tackle cancer
  • 43% of people recognise the major impact universities can have on reducing deaths from cancer

The survey, carried out among 2,000 UK adults by Public First on behalf of the University of Cambridge, highlights the concerns that people have over a cancer diagnosis. It suggests that late diagnosis – too late to treat their cancer – is the biggest concern in relation to a cancer diagnosis (70%) followed by the impact on one’s family and those around them (52%).

When asked which transformative development they would like to see in the future – including eradicating diseases such as malaria, self-driving cars and genetically engineered crops enabling us to end famine – 55% of respondents chose “being able to detect and treat cancer early enough so that no-one dies of the disease”. Only eliminating poverty came anywhere close, with 23% of respondents.

CCRH
Architect image of Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital, planned for the Cambridge Biomedical Campus

The University of Cambridge and Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) are working to build Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital, a revolutionary new type of hospital that promises to change the story of cancer. The specialist cancer facility is bringing world-leading scientists within the walls of a new NHS hospital – for the first time – to detect cancer earlier and deliver personalised healthcare and precision cancer medicine to patients.

Cancer affects one in two of us and understandably induces fear in patients and their families.

Professor Richard Gilbertson

Professor Richard Gilbertson, Research Lead for Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital and Director of the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre at the University said: "People are worried that cancer treatments won’t work or that the side-effects will be terrible, but also what their diagnosis will mean to their family.

Professor Richard Gilbertson
Professor Richard Gilbertson

“At Cambridge we believe it’s possible to imagine a world where there is no longer a fear of cancer. It’s an ambitious goal that we – along with many other researchers around the world – are working hard to realise.”

The University of Cambridge is currently fundraising for Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital. To support this, it is today launching a month-long focus (opens in a new tab) on its cancer research, including a look at the new hospital, meeting researchers investigating the earliest stages of cancer, finding out how AI is helping in the fight against the disease, and meeting some of the patients who are playing a key role in groundbreaking cancer research.

The hospital that will change the story of cancer

Link: https://youtu.be/r-L7LLbSrHM?si=_g0zDLTSmqtaZUw2

Video transcript

0:01
Imagine a future where no one dies from cancer.

0:08
One in two of us will be diagnosed with cancer in our lifetime. 

0:13
Every year, 18 million more people like me

0:16
are diagnosed with cancer across the globe.

0:19
We can change this.

0:21
From the structure of DNA to rapid genome sequencing

0:25
from liquid biopsies to revolutionary new cancer drugs.

0:29
Cambridge has transformed how we understand and treat cancer.

0:34
Now we're building a new kind of hospital

0:37
that will change the future of cancer forever.

0:41
Our future will be one where we find cancer

0:44
at the earliest possible stage.

0:48
Where cancer researchers and doctors

0:49
work with physicists, mathematicians and engineers to develop radical new ways

0:54
of detecting cancer early without the need for invasive tests.

0:57
So that cancers can be treated more easily without the need

1:00
for surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy.

1:03
And where we can't detect cancers earlier,

1:06
we'll use AI and big data to ensure people get the most effective treatments

1:11
when they need them.

1:13
Our future will be one where cancer

1:15
treatments are kinder and personalised just for you.

1:19
Cutting edge genome technology will allow us to examine

1:22
DNA faster than ever and tailor treatments for individual patients,

1:27
allowing us to treat the patient as well as their cancer

1:31
so that people like me can have a future with our families.

1:37
Our future will change all of our futures.

1:40
Our network of international collaborators will ensure that the discoveries

1:44
we make here in Cambridge reach the people who need them most.

1:48
Changing the lives of millions of people in every corner of the world.

1:52
Together, we can create a future

1:55
free from the fear of cancer.

1:58
At Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital,

2:01
we're changing the story of cancer.

In the poll, when the public were asked what would concern them the most about receiving a cancer diagnosis, the most commonly selected worry was that the cancer would be detected too late to treat (70%). 52% of respondents were concerned about the impact on their family or those around them, 41% about getting access to the right treatment, and 36% about the side-effects of treatments.

Asked what would make them less afraid of being diagnosed with cancer, 61% replied “Knowing that the form of cancer I have is treatable”. Highlighting once again the importance of early detection, over half of respondents (51%) said “Knowing we are better at catching cancer early enough to treat”.

Outcomes can be completely transformed – better survival and less invasive treatments – if the cancer is diagnosed early enough,

Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald

Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald, Director of the Early Cancer Institute and Honorary Consultant in Cancer Medicine at Addenbrooke’s Hospital added: “That’s why a lot of our focus now is on understanding cancer at its very earliest stage – years before an individual will develop any symptoms. That way, it may even be possible to prevent the disease in the first place, or at least catch it when it can be treated easily.”

Rebecca Fitzgerald holding a capsule sponge on a string
Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald demonstrates the capsule sponge for early detection of oesophageal cancer

Knowing that a lot of people – including organisations such as the University of Cambridge and the future Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital – are researching how we prevent, diagnose and treat cancer is reassuring, the poll suggests. A third of respondents (32%) said this would make them less afraid of a cancer diagnosis. 43% of respondents believe cancer research at universities will have a big impact on reducing deaths from cancer.

Cambridge is really leading the way on transforming our understanding of cancer and how we can prevent it and treat it. This brilliant work will save and transform lives locally, nationally, and around the world, such as being able to sequence a tumour’s DNA at speed, right through to developing revolutionary new cancer drugs such as olaparib. It is world-leading work which makes me extremely proud.

Professor Deborah Prentice, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge

The public were asked their views on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to improve diagnosis and treatment of cancer. An overwhelming majority were in favour of its application, with just 8% saying we shouldn’t use AI for cancer diagnosis and treatment. 55% thought it was acceptable to use AI to speed up research into new treatments, 47% to help a doctor diagnose their cancer and 41% to help their doctor decide which treatment would work best.

At Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Cambridge, scientists are developing AI tools with the potential to transform cancer treatments, by speeding up diagnosis, personalising therapy, and reducing costs. As part of this work, researchers are using AI to predict how patients will respond to a particular treatment before they receive it, allow them to start treatment sooner, target hard-to-treat cancers, and enable screening of cancers that at the moment would otherwise be prohibitively expensive.

Dr Raj Jena
Dr Raj Jena, who has pioneered the use of AI in preparing radiotherapy scans, saving many hours of doctors’ time