Global Colon Cancer Association

Global Colon Cancer Association The Global Colon Cancer Association is the voice for the millions of colon cancer patients worldwide Similarly, cancer patients have little to no support.

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the 4th most common and 3rd leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide (men and women combined). More than 620,000 people die each year from CRC and the number is growing. CRC is also the most preventable major cancer through screening, yet more than 1.2 million people are diagnosed annually. Despite the cost effectiveness of screening and the availability of proven screen

ing tools, the incidence rate CRC is expected to increase by 33.5% by 2020. The economic burden of CRC is staggering, reported to be in excess of $33,000,000,000 annually. For many already diagnosed with CRC, access to life saving medications and treatments is a challenge. In many countries around the world, there are no CRC screening programs, no access to treatments and no patient voice to effectuate change. Even in developed and developing countries, CRC remains a huge problem. In the US, one-third of the number of people who should be screened are not getting tested and in Europe the problem is far worse. There are 136 million Europeans eligible for CRC screening yet only 12 million have participated. While Europe accounts for only 11% of the world population, it accounts for about one-third of all CRC deaths worldwide. CRC is increasing in economically transitioning countries, including Eastern Europe, most of Asia, and in select countries in South America. CRC incidence rates worldwide have increased in 27 of 51 international cancer registries studied by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Very few other countries have formal screening programs, coverage for testing or awareness programs to educate the public about the disease and how it can be prevented or access to available treatments. Awareness of the disease, its reach, its ability to be prevented, and its treatability if diagnosed early are the keys to changing the global problem of colon cancer.

June is Cancer Immunotherapy Month, and thereโ€™s an important CRC conversation many patients are still missing.About 85% ...
06/05/2026

June is Cancer Immunotherapy Month, and thereโ€™s an important CRC conversation many patients are still missing.

About 85% of colorectal cancers are MSS, where current approved immunotherapy has not shown the same benefit as in MSI-High disease. But research is moving forward, with clinical trials testing combination approaches designed to help change that.

The question is whether patients are being told to ask about them.

Free resources: https://gcca.info/Clinical_Trials_FB ๐Ÿ’™

Nominations are now open for the 2026 Global CRC Leadership Awards, and weโ€™re looking for the individuals and organizati...
06/05/2026

Nominations are now open for the 2026 Global CRC Leadership Awards, and weโ€™re looking for the individuals and organizations making a meaningful impact in colorectal cancer around the world. ๐ŸŒ

This yearโ€™s award categories include:

๐Ÿ† Global Policy & Advocacy Leadership Award
๐Ÿ† Equity & Community Engagement Award
๐Ÿ† Emerging Global Leader in CRC Award

You do not need to be a GCCA member to nominate someone or to be nominated. Please note that self-nominations are not accepted.

๐Ÿ“… Nomination deadline: July 15, 2026
๐Ÿ“ Awardees will be recognized at the Global CRC Congress, November 5โ€“6, 2026 in Nairobi, Kenya

If you know someone advancing advocacy, equity, research, awareness, or patient support in colorectal cancer, we encourage you to submit a nomination.

Submit your nomination at the link in comments.

06/04/2026

Something is coming for Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month 2027.
We've been working behind the scenes on an exciting new initiative that will bring people together across the global colorectal cancer community.
That's all we can say for now.
More details are on the way. Until then, stay curious and stay tuned.

06/02/2026

ASCO 2026. That's a wrap. Thank you to everyone who stopped by Booth 11006 and to our Knowing Is Worth the Wait sponsors Johnson & Johnson , Amgen , and Pfizer . https://gcca.info/KIWTW_ASCO_FB

More choices. More screening. More lives saved.The American Cancer Society  has updated its colorectal cancer screening ...
06/01/2026

More choices. More screening. More lives saved.

The American Cancer Society has updated its colorectal cancer screening guidelines to include additional blood-based and at-home stool testing options alongside existing screening methods.

At GCCA, we believe the best screening test is the one people actually do. While colonoscopy remains an important screening tool, offering more evidence-based options can help reach people who might otherwise go unscreened.

With approximately one-third of eligible adults still not up to date on colorectal cancer screening, expanding access and choice is critical to finding cancers earlier and preventing more deaths.

Talk to your healthcare provider about which screening option is right for you.

06/01/2026

We asked ASCO attendees to test what they know about cancer biomarker testing. The results were eye-opening. Try it yourself: https://gcca.info/KYB_game_FB

05/31/2026

Three questions. Zero correct. That's not a bad score. That's the average.

We asked someone three true-or-false questions about biomarker testing in colorectal cancer. They got every single one wrong. And honestly, most people do.

Over 60% of colorectal cancer patients start treatment before their biomarker results come back. Those results typically take just 1-3 weeks. And they determine which treatment actually fits your tumor, whether you qualify for clinical trials, and whether certain drugs could be dangerous for you.

Think you'd score higher? Find us as at ASCO 2026 Booth 11006 and play the Biomarker IQ Quiz and find out: https://gcca.info/KYB_game_FB

Tag someone who needs to see this.

05/30/2026

Booth 11006. ASCO 2026. Knowing Is Worth the Wait. knowyourbiomarker.org/wait

American Society of Clinical Oncology

05/29/2026

Troy was diagnosed with colorectal cancer. He started chemotherapy, but he had severe symptoms. His wife Jodi said wait, get the biomarker test before more chemo. The test came back.

Troy had a DPD deficiency. His chemo reaction wasn't normal side effects. It was extreme drug toxicity. Standard chemotherapy could have killed him.Jodi's gut instinct saved his life.

This is why GCCA's Knowing Is Worth The Wait campaign exists. Biomarker testing takes 10โ€“14 days. More than 60% of colorectal cancer patients start treatment before those results come back.
Troy was one of them and it nearly cost him his life.

GCCA brings the Knowing Is Worth The Wait campaign to ASCO2026, because every patient deserves what Jodi gave Troy: the chance to know before you treat.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Learn More: https://gcca.info/FB_KIWTW

Who is your Jodi, the person who pushed you or someone you love to slow down, ask more questions, or wait for results? Drop their name below.

๐Ÿ’™

Address

5335 Wisconsin Avenue NW Suite 440
Washington D.C., DC
20015

Website

https://www.globalcca.org/

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