Washington Post - Generation   X and millennials are at an increased risk of developing certain   cancers compared with older generations, a shift that is probably due to   generational changes in diet, lifestyle and environmental exposures, a   large new study suggests. In a new study published Wednesday   in the Lancet Public Health journal, researchers from the American   Cancer Society reported that cancer rates for 17 of the 34 most common   cancers are increasing in progressively younger generations. The   findings included:    
- Cancers with the most significant increased risk are kidney, pancreatic and small intestine, which are two to three times as high for millennial men and women as baby boomers.
- Millennial women also are at higher risk of liver and bile duct cancers compared with baby boomers.
- Although the risk of getting cancer is rising, for most cancers, the risk of dying of the disease stabilized or declined among younger people. But mortality rates increased for gallbladder, colorectal, testicular and uterine cancers, as well as for liver cancer among younger women...
If the current trend continues, the increased cancer and mortality rates among younger people may "halt or even reverse the progress that we have made in reducing cancer mortality over the past several decades," he added.While there is no clear explanation for the increased cancer rates among younger people, the researchers suggest that there may be several contributing factors, including rising obesity rates; altered microbiomes from unhealthy diets high in saturated fats, red meat and ultra-processed foods or antibiotic use; poor sleep; sedentary lifestyles; and environmental factors, including exposure to pollutants and carcinogenic chemicals.
