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ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society Prevention and Early Detection Guidelines

The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society has created guidelines for the prevention and early detection of cancer. Read complete versions of all our guidelines, find patient-friendly versions, and learn more about how ACS develops its recommendations here.

About the Guidelines

How the Guidelines Are Created

The ACS develops guidelines for cancer screening and prevention to meet the needs of clinicians, the general public, and policy.?

Screening Guidelines Development Process

Since 1980, the ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society (ACS) has introduced and periodically updated guidelines or guidance related to screening and/or informed decision-making about tests for early detection of cancers (and, in some cases, precursor lesions) of the breast, cervix, colon and rectum, endometrium, lung, and prostate.?These?screening guidelines have evolved with new scientific data, as new?screening technologies became available, and as standards for creating?guidelines changed.?

Read more about our screening guideline creation process.?

Prevention Guidelines Development Process

For people who do not use tobacco, the most important modifiable determinants of cancer risk are weight control, dietary?choices, and levels of physical activity.

The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society (ACS) publishes the Diet and Physical Activity Guideline to serve as a foundation for its communication, policy, and community strategies and, ultimately, to affect dietary and physical activity patterns among people living in the US. This guideline is developed by a national panel of experts in cancer research, prevention, epidemiology, public health, and policy, it reflects the most current scientific evidence related to dietary and activity patterns and cancer risk. The guideline?focuses on recommendations for individual choices but also present recommendations for?community action to create a supportive social and physical environment in?which individuals have genuine opportunities to choose healthy behaviors.?The guideline is updated every 5-7 years, as new evidence accumulates.

Highlights

These guidelines address the populations for whom testing is recommended or not recommended, the recommended tests and testing intervals, and the benefits, limitations, and harms associated with testing for early cancer detection.?

  • ACS guidelines for the early detection of?cancer in?average-risk adults endorse screening for breast cancer,?cervical cancer, and?colorectal cancer.?
  • ACS recommends informed and/or?shared decision-making for adults?men considering prostate cancer?screening?based on uncertainties and differing values about?the?uncertainty of the balance of benefits and harms.
  • ACS lung?cancer screening guidelines also stress informed?and shared?decision-making.?
  • ACS guidelines for risk reduction and prevention include?recommendations for nutrition and physical activity and for?use of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine.

Current Guidelines

Nutrition and Physical Activity Guidelines

Since 1991, the ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society has published guidelines that focus on nutrition and physical activity, aimed at advising health care professionals, policy makers, and the general public about dietary and other lifestyle practices that reduce cancer risk. These guidelines provide a summary of the current scientific evidence about weight control, physical activity, and nutrition related to cancer prevention.?

In addition to recommendations regarding individual choices, the ACS guideline underscores what communities can and should do to facilitate healthy eating and physical activity behaviors.

Most recently, the 2020 Diet and Physical Activity Guidelines for Cancer Survivors provide health care providers and patients with evidence-based information to help cancer survivors and their families make informed choices related to nutrition and physical activity, to improve treatment outcomes, quality of life, and overall survival.
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Vaccine Guidelines

The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Cancer Society recommends HPV vaccination for boys and girls between age 9 and 12. Children and young adults age 13 through 26 who have not been vaccinated, or who haven¡¯t completed the vaccine series, should get the vaccine as soon as possible.