More people need to be aware of the signs of lung cancer as figures reveal the stark reality of early diagnosis on survival rates.
Almost 24,000 people a year in England receive a lung cancer diagnosis when the disease is at a late stage – only around 15 per cent of cases are diagnosed at the earliest stage, when treatment is most likely to be successful.
The next phase of the NHS Be Clear on Cancer campaign is to drive awareness of the signs and symptoms of lung cancer and to encourage people with a persistent cough to see their GP early.
Lung cancer is currently England's biggest cancer killer, causing around 28,000 deaths each year and with around 33,800 people diagnosed. Those diagnosed at the earliest stage are five times more likely to survive lung cancer for at least five years than those diagnosed at a late stage.
Professor Kevin Fenton, Director of Health and Wellbeing at Public Health England, said:
“These figures show that more needs to be done to raise awareness of the signs of lung cancer and ultimately save more lives.
“The results from the previous campaign are really encouraging but awareness levels of a persistent cough as a symptom of lung cancer are still low. Only by increasing awareness of potential symptoms, and encouraging people to visit their doctor sooner rather than later, will we see the number of early diagnoses, and people surviving the disease, start to rise.”
One of the reasons behind England’s low early diagnosis rate is the public’s lack of awareness about the disease and its symptoms. New data shows:
- almost three-quarters of people are unaware that lung cancer is England’s biggest cancer killer
- despite the fact that lung cancer is most common in people aged over 50, one in four people (26 per cent) think that all age groups are equally at risk of lung cancer
- 40 per cent of people are unaware that a cough that has lasted three weeks or more is a potential symptom of lung cancer.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said:
"More people die from lung cancer than any other cancer in England, but many people don't know the signs and symptoms that could save their lives. The message from this campaign is clear – if you have a persistent cough, go and see your doctor. The earlier lung cancer is diagnosed, the more likely that treatment will be successful.
“I am committed to improving cancer survival rates and have set out an ambition to save an extra 5,000 lives every year by 2014 – getting people diagnosed early is one part of our drive to have the best cancer services in the world”
The Be Clear on Cancer lung cancer campaign is aimed at men and women over the age of 50, as they are most at risk. Worryingly, almost a fifth (19 per cent) of this group admits they have not visited their doctor in the past when they have had a persistent cough. The majority thought their cough would clear up on its own.
Sean Duffy, National Clinical Director for Cancer at NHS England, said:
“Awareness campaigns like this are especially important in getting people with potential symptoms into doctors’ surgeries. During the regional pilot, trusts within the campaign area saw a 14 per cent increase in lung cancer cases diagnosed compared with a year earlier, whereas there was only a 4.7 per cent increase in trusts outside the pilot area.
“However, more needs to be done for our survival rates to be as good as the best in Europe. If they were, it is estimated that around 1,300 deaths could be avoided each year.”
The Be Clear on Cancer campaign will see adverts – featuring real GPs – on TV, print and radio from today until mid-August. Face-to-face events will also take place in a number of shopping centres.
The Be Clear on Cancer campaign, which first ran in summer 2012, aims to make people aware of the symptoms of lung cancer and encourage them to visit their GP if they have had a cough for three weeks or more.