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awareness

Strengthened by Action & Education
September - cancer awareness month.
Gold is the color for childhood cancer, Go Gold!

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, a time to honor and remember children and families affected by these rare diseases, and help rally support to give kids with cancer better outcomes by supporting our ground-breaking research.

Diagnosis

  • The incidence of childhood cancer is on the increase, averaging 0.6% increase per year since mid 1970’s resulting in an overall increase of 24% over the last 40 years

  • 1 and 8 children will not survive childhood cancer

  • 1 in 285 children were diagnosed with cancer in 2014

  • 43 children per day or 15,780 children per year are

  • expected to be diagnosed in 2014 with cancer

  • (10,450 ages 0 to 14, and 5,330 ages 15 to 19)

  • The average age at diagnosis is 6 years old, while

  • adults’ average age for cancer diagnosis is 66

  • Childhood cancer is not one disease – there are 16

  • major types of pediatric cancers and over 100 subtypes

Survival

  • The average 5 year survival rate for childhood cancers when considered as a whole is 83%

  • Cancer survival rates vary not only depending upon the type of cancer, but also upon individual factors attributable to each child

  • Survival rates can range from almost 0% for cancers such as DIPG, a type of brain cancer, to as high as 90% for the most common type of childhood cancer known as Acute Lymphoma Leukemia (ALL)

  • The average survival rate not including children with ALL is 80%

  • In 2010 there were 379,112 childhood cancer survivors in the United States

  • Approximately 1 in 530 young adults between the ages of 20 years and 39 years is a survivor of childhood cancer

Long Term Health Effects Associated with Treatments & Survival

  • More than 95% of childhood cancer survivors will have a significant health-related issue by the time they are 45 years of age; these health-related issues are side-effects of either the cancer or more commonly, the result of its treatment. One-third will suffer severe and chronic side effects; one-third will suffer moderate to severe health problems; and one-third will suffer slight to moderate side effects

Mortality

  • Cancer is the number one cause of death by disease among children

  • About thirty-five percent of children diagnosed with cancer will die within 30 years of diagnosis

  • On average, about 17% of children die within 5 years of diagnosis. Among those children that survive to five years from diagnosis, 18% will die within 30 years of diagnosis

  • Those that survive the five years have an eight times greater mortality rate due to the increased risk of liver and heart disease and increased risk for re-occurrence of the original cancer or of a secondary cancer

  • There are 71 potential life years lost on average when a child dies of cancer compared to 17 potential life years lost for adult

Treatment, Research and Funding

(Despite these facts, childhood cancer research is vastly & consistently underfunded.)

  • Since 1980, only three drugs, two used in the treatment of ALL, teniposide (1990) and clofarabine (2004), and Unituxin (dinutuximab), recently approved in March, 2015 for use in high risk neuroblastoma, have been approved in the first instance for use in children (and only four additional new drugs have been approved for use by both adults and children). Since 1980, fewer than 10 drugs have been developed for use in children with cancer –-including those specifically for children and those for both children and adult–compared with hundreds of drugs that have been developed specifically for adults. Equally important, for many of the childhood cancers, the same treatments that existed in the 1970’s continue without change as of 2014

  • The average cost of a stay in a hospital for a child with cancer is $40,000 per stay

  • On average, pediatric hospitalizations for cancer cost almost five times as much as hospitalizations for other pediatric conditions

  • For 2014, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) budget is $4.9 billion. It is anticipated that childhood cancer will receive 4% of that sum or $195 million

  • Prostate cancer (patient average age at diagnosis, 66 years), receives more research funding from NCI than all childhood cancers (patient average age at diagnosis, 6 years

Numbers reflect statistics from the Coalition Against Childhood Cancer and the American Childhood Cancer Organization. 

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To win the battle -
one must know the facts

 

You are not alone in this battle. Here are a few online resources to learn more about childhood cancer and how to fight it.

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