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CANCER OF THE RECTUM IN YOUNG PERSONS

CURTICE ROSSER, M.D.; J. G. KERR, M.D.
JAMA. 1939;113(13):1192-1196. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800380010003.
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Carcinoma has been regarded up to comparatively recent years as a disease limited entirely to middle and later age groups. Collected reports in medical literature before 1900 emphasized the extreme rarity of cancer occurring in the first three decades of life. For example, Gusserow1 in 1886 reviewed 3,385 cases of cancer including epithelioma and found only two that had originated before the patients were 20 years of age. De LaCamp2 was able to find only nineteen cases of carcinoma in persons under 20 years of age in a total group of 9,963 cases recorded previous to 1897. Williams3 reported in 1898 that in a study of 806 patients with carcinoma he found only one under 20 years of age. Later he collected 11,934 cases and reported that less than 1 per cent of the patients were under 30 years of age.

Several reporters since 1910 have called

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