The risk of dying from cancer is 70% higher in some poorer parts of England than in wealthy areas, new research has revealed.
A study published in The Lancet Oncology has found that the the highest risks were in northern cities such as Liverpool, Manchester, Hull and Newcastle, and in coastal areas to the east of London.
Cancer is now the leading cause of death in England, having overtaken cardiovascular diseases. But the risk of dying from cancer before 80 years old has declined since 2002 – from one in six women to one in eight, and from one in five men to one in six.
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Researchers analysed the risk of dying from cancers with the largest death toll across 314 districts in England between 2002 and 2019, finding that there was a correlation with deaths and deprivation.
One in six women in Manchester died from cancer before they turned 80 in 2019, compared with a one in 10 in Westminster. In Harrow, one in eight men died of cancer before 80, compared with one in five in Manchester.