Breast cancer cases in over 50s top 10,000 cases for first time
10 May 2013

The number of women under 50 diagnosed with breast cancer each year in the UK has exceeded 10,000 for the first time according to latest statistics released by Cancer Research UK.
This means that one in five breast cancer cases are in women under 50 as latest figures show the total number of women diagnosed each year is now approaching 50,000.
Around 7,700 women under 50 were diagnosed with breast cancer in 1995 in the UK.
But by 2010 more than 10,000 were diagnosed with the disease, with the corresponding incidence rates rising by eleven per cent. The rise in younger women reflects the overall steady increase in the numbers of breast cancer cases diagnosed in women of all ages – an 18 per cent growth in incidence rates over the same time period.
It’s not clear why rates of breast cancer are rising in this age group but increasing alcohol intake and hormonal factors such as having fewer children and having them later in life, and increased use of the contraceptive pill may be playing a role.
‘Breast cancer is more common in older women but these figures show that younger women are also at risk of developing the disease,’ said Sara Hiom, Cancer Research UK’s director of health information. ‘Women of all ages who notice anything different about their breasts, including changes in size, shape or feel, a lump or thickening, nipple discharge or rash, dimpling, puckering or redness of the skin, should see their GP straight away, even if they have attended breast cancer screening. It’s more likely not to be cancer but if it is, detecting it early gives the best chance of successful treatment.’
Despite the increased numbers of women under 50, diagnosed with breast cancer the rate of women in this age group dying from the disease has fallen by 40 per cent since the early 1990s.
In the early 1990s, the death rate from breast cancer in women under the age of 50 was nine per 100,000 women in the UK. By late 2000, this had fallen to five women in every 100,000.
More than eight in ten women diagnosed with breast cancer before the age of 50 now survive their disease for at least five years.