Cancer screening in the older adult Book Section


Authors: Alexander, K.; Korc-Grodzicki, B.
Editors: Wasserman, M. R.; Bakerjian, D.; Linnebur, S.; Brangman, S.; Cesari, M.; Rosen, S.
Article/Chapter Title: Cancer screening in the older adult
Abstract: Cancer incidence increases with age. It is the second most common cause of death in older adults. Prevention and early detection of certain cancers helps preserve quality of life and offers the possibility of a cure with less aggressive treatments. Lifestyle modifications and healthy behaviors can mitigate the modifiable cancer risks. Screening tests must be effective, safe, and well tolerated with acceptably low rates of false positive and false negative results. Some people diagnosed with preclinical cancer will die from competing causes. Older patients require an individualized approach in decision-making. Estimation of life expectancy, comorbid disease burden, and status on the fit-frail spectrum are important steps. The risk benefits of cancer screening should be discussed with the older adult and family/caregivers to arrive at a decision whether to screen or not. In this chapter, we describe the current prevention and screening recommendations for some common cancers where they exist. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024.
Keywords: cancer prevention; cancer screening; cancer risk factors; geriatric oncology; early cancer detection
Book Title: Geriatric Medicine: A Person Centered Evidence Based Approach. 5th ed
ISBN: 978-3-030-74719-0
Publisher: Springer  
Publication Place: Cham, Switzerland
Date Published: 2024-01-01
Start Page: 801
End Page: 825
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-74720-6_76
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Book Chapter: 39 -- Located in "Part III: Cancer in Older Adults: An Overview" in Volume 2 -- Source: Scopus
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