Essayer OR - Gratuit
Why Cancer Is Rising in Young People...and What You Can Do About It
Women's Health US
|Summer 2025
When Krystle Harris was diagnosed with stage III breast cancer in 2019, life as she knew it went on hold. She was in a graduate program, was working full-time, and had just been the maid of honor at her childhood best friend's wedding.

She was also only 28 years old. “It felt like absolutely everything about me was stripped away at that moment,” she says.
She moved home to begin treatment: six months of chemo, a lumpectomy, and radiation. She was declared cancer-free in April 2020, but four years later, doctors discovered she'd developed metastatic thyroid cancer—all before her 33rd birthday.
If that story sounds eerily similar to ones you've heard from friends, it's not a coincidence. Since 1990, the global incidence of early-onset cancer (cancers diagnosed in people younger than 50) has increased by nearly 80 percent and is projected to rise by another 31 percent by 2030, according to a study in BMJ Oncology. And compared to men under 50, women of the same age have an 82 percent higher rate, up from 51 percent in 2002, according to the American Cancer Society's most recent annual report. On top of all that, young people's cancers tend to be more aggressive, often because they're diagnosed at later stages. Colon and rectal cancers lead the uptick with the fastest rate increases, followed by uterine, blood (leukemia), kidney, and breast.
Traditionally, one of the biggest risk factors for cancer has been age. Now, being young isn't the protector it once was, and scientists are disturbed, to say the least. Even if you don't have someone in your life affected by cancer, you've probably noticed the increase in the news. Former Bachelorette star Katie Thurston was just 34 when she found a cancerous lump in her breast; Jessie J recently shared that she was diagnosed with breast cancer at 37; Teddi Mellencamp was 41 when doctors discovered melanoma; Kate Middleton was 42 when she talked about her cancer diagnosis; Olivia Munn was 43 when she underwent a double mastectomy and hysterectomy for stage I aggressive breast cancer. All this prompts the question: What's going on?
Behind the Climb
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Summer 2025 de Women's Health US.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Women's Health US

Women's Health US
Ladies WHO LIFT
From NYC to Texas, women in their 60s, 70s, and beyond are flipping the script on aging—training hard and reaping physical, emotional, and social benefits. Science says they're onto something.
8 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
the perimenopause playbook
Women as YOUNG as their mid-30s are experiencing a CASCADE of SYMPTOMS like hot flashes and anxiety and are wondering WTF is up with their bodies. Nobody told them it could be PERIMENOPAUSE—arguably the most MISUNDERSTOOD phase of the MENOPAUSAL transition.
7 mins
Summer 2025
Women's Health US
how young is too young for hormone therapy?
Contrary to popular belief, you probably can (and should) be taking it sooner than you think.
6 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
SEX, DRUGS & THE PURSUIT OF HEALTH
Meet the \"unapologetically pink\" entrepreneur who took the pharmaceutical world by storm with a simple concept: A satisfying sex life is essential to living a long and happy one.
7 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
finisher
For her next act, Hoda Kotb is offering lessons in happiness with her new app, Joy 101.
1 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
Maximum Protein. Minimal Effort.
When you're too tired and can't be bothered, make a meal to match your sloth energy. From super-quick, no-cook dishes to low-prep, one-pan wonders that won't leave you with a sink full of dishes, we've got you covered. Boxed mac 'n' cheese could never.
5 mins
Summer 2025
Women's Health US
REDEFINING LONGEVITY
Women don't want to live to be 150. They just want to feel good now—and in all the years they do have. Meet the rapidly expanding group of experts working to completely flip the narrative on what it means to live longer and stronger.
10 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
How Romantasy Saved My Sex Life
Transporting to fantastical worlds transformed one writer's real-life relationship—and now she'll never go back.
5 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
Creatine Craze
Can the supplement improve your life outside the gym?
3 mins
Summer 2025

Women's Health US
Welcome to the Musclespan Movement
Doctors and women are turning to a new metric as the ultimate indicator of longevity—and a powerful motivator for transformation.
9 mins
Summer 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size