UK Cancer Survival Rates Lag: Experts Call for Urgent National Plan to Tackle Disparities
August 13, 2025
Cancer care in the UK is described as overwhelmed, understaffed, and underfunded, struggling to meet the rising demand for services.
Experts like Professor Michel Coleman stress that political and financial support are crucial to sustain progress in cancer survival rates, warning that stagnation could have serious consequences.
The UK continues to rank poorly internationally for cancer survival, with five-year survival rates for cancers like breast cancer falling behind countries such as France, Japan, Australia, and the US.
While screening has boosted survival for some cancers, outcomes for harder-to-detect cancers like oesophageal, stomach, lung, and brain remain poor, with only slight improvements.
A long-term study from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine shows that the 10-year cancer survival index reached 49.8% in 2018, but the rate of improvement has slowed significantly over recent decades.
Cancer Research UK and health authorities are advocating for a comprehensive national cancer plan aimed at reducing waiting times and improving survival rates, with some recent progress in faster diagnosis and testing.
Screening programs have significantly improved survival rates for breast, bowel, and cervical cancers, but progress for stomach, lung, and brain cancers has been minimal over the past 50 years.
There are stark disparities in survival rates among different cancer types, with testicular cancer boasting a 97% 10-year survival rate, while pancreatic cancer survival drops to just 4.3%, creating a 92 percentage point gap.
Summary based on 17 sources
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Sources

The Independent • Aug 12, 2025
Experts warn that progress in cancer survival rates is ‘slowing’
Medscape • Aug 13, 2025
Slowing UK Cancer Gains Risk Widening Survival Gap
Eastern Daily Press • Aug 13, 2025
Speed of improvement in cancer survival rates ‘slowing’, say experts