Blood cancers are the fifth most common cancer type in the UK, impacting hundreds of thousands of people, and are the third biggest cause of cancer deaths. For too long, government cancer plans have ignored the unique needs of patients with blood cancer. Cancers which, unlike solid tumours, cannot be treated surgically.
60,000 people in the UK are currently affected by leukaemia alone, a cancer that progresses quickly and aggressively. Depending on their type of leukaemia and where they live in the UK, patients face unique challenges in treatment and care, leading to differing outcomes. This World Cancer Day, Leukaemia UK is calling on the government to recognise the challenges faced by people with leukaemia and other blood cancers in the upcoming national cancer strategy, and to take urgent action to stop them devastating lives.
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Many people with the signs and symptoms of leukaemia struggle to get in front of a GP, which contributes to why 37% of leukaemia cases are diagnosed in emergency settings such as A&E; far more than the average of 21% for all cancers. Those who do get to see a GP then face delays in being referred for a diagnostic full blood count test due to lack of capacity in these services.
Additionally, leukaemia and other blood cancers circulate the entire body, so they cannot be staged in the way that solid tumours are, meaning they are left out of government early diagnosis targets and strategies for cancers.
These factors significantly impact the effectiveness of treatment, prognosis and survival rates. Half of the people currently diagnosed with leukaemia in the UK won’t survive for more than five years. For those diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), a particularly aggressive form of the disease, the outlook is even bleaker. If no action is taken, nearly 80% of those diagnosed with AML today will not survive until the end of this parliament. This is simply unacceptable, especially in the context of higher five-year survival rates in European countries and the progress that has been seen in other common cancers.
As it is not a solid cancer type that can be removed through surgery, people with leukaemia rely on innovative treatments. However, depending on where patients are based in the UK, the treatment options available to them can vary dramatically.