What is bowel cancer?
Bowel cancer is cancer in any part of the large bowel, including the
colon, rectum and rectosigmoid. It is sometimes known as colorectal
cancer and might also be called colon or rectal cancer, depending on
where it starts in the bowel.
You can access further information about bowel cancer, including risk
factors, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment from
Cancer
Council Victoria. You can also
call
our trusted cancer nurses on 13 11 20 for support and to learn about
our range of services for people affected by cancer.
The Victorian Cancer Registry also operates an interactive web
portal,
Data
Explorer, which provides more trends and statistics than published
here.
How common is bowel cancer?
In 2023, 3804 Victorians were diagnosed with bowel cancer. Of these,
there were 2066 males and 1738 females, representing 54.3% and 45.7% of
the total Victorian bowel cancer diagnoses, respectively. Currently,
bowel cancer is diagnosed at a rate of 53.6 per 100,000 males and 40.2
per 100,000 females. The median age at diagnosis of bowel cancer is 69
years in males and 72 in females (Figure 1 & 2). Accounting for 9.7%
of all cancers diagnosed and 11.1% of all cancer-related deaths in 2023,
bowel cancer was the 3rd most commonly diagnosed cancer and the 2nd most
common cause of cancer-related deaths in Victoria in 2023.
Trends in bowel cancer over time
Figure 3a shows for males between 2005 to 2023 the age standardised
incidence rate of bowel cancer declined by an average of 2.3% per
year.
For females between 2017 to 2023 the age standardised incidence rate
of bowel cancer declined by an average of 3.1% per year.
Bowel cancer morphology
Figure 4 provides a summary of the different types of cells
(morphology) which have caused bowel cancer among all cases. Most bowel
cancer tumours, 80.6%, present as Adenocarcinoma tumours.
Geographical variance in bowel cancer by local government area
Figure 5 demonstrates variation in age-standardised incidence rates
of bowel cancer, by local government areas. Darker shading indicates
areas with higher rates of bowel cancer.
Bowel cancer in people born overseas
Figure 6 shows the age standardised incidence rates of bowel cancer
in Australian-born Victorians compared to other major migrant groups,
over the five-year period 2018 to 2022. The highest age standardised
incidence rate for bowel cancer was 63.3 for males born in the Southern
Europe region and the lowest rate of 31.6 was observed in males born in
the Southern and Central Asia region. The highest age standardised
incidence rate for bowel cancer was 46.8 for females born in the
Australia and New Zealand region and lowest rate of 22.3 was observed in
females born in the Southern and Central Asia region.
Bowel cancer distribution by stage at diagnosis
Figure 7 shows distribution of bowel cancer by stage of disease at
diagnosis in 2023. In males, Stage unknown accounted for the largest
proportion (26%) of new diagnoses and Stage 4 for the lowest proportion
(16.5%) of new bowel cancer diagnoses. In females, Stage unknown
accounted for the largest proportion (24%) of new diagnoses and Stage 4
accounted for the lowest proportion (16%) of new bowel cancer
diagnoses.
Bowel cancer five-year relative survival
Figure 8 shows the change in 5-year survival for bowel cancer, and
the 5-year survival trend for all cancers over the same time period. It
demonstrates that five-year relative survival has increased for bowel
cancer between 1983-1987 and 2018-2022 from 46% to 72%.