The cancer control continuum has been used since at least the mid-1970s to describe the various stages from cancer etiology, prevention, early detection, diagnosis, treatment, survivorship, and end of life.
Like many other useful concepts, the continuum is oversimplified. As modern biology has changed our understanding of cancer, we now recognize that the categories are useful labels, but the processes are not so discrete. For example, we recognize that colonoscopy is both a screening test for colon cancer and a prevention strategy if polyps are found. Moreover, some research topics are crosscutting. For example, epidemiology, communication, decision making, quality of care, dissemination and implementation, and health disparities concern us at each point on the continuum.
The cancer control continuum is a useful framework on which to view plans, progress, and priorities. It helps us identify research gaps, where we must collaborate with others to have an impact, and where more resources may be needed.
The Cancer Control Continuum
Focus
Etiology
- Environmental factors
- Genetic factors
- Gene-environment interactions
- Medication (or pharmaceutical) exposure
- Infectious agents
- Health behaviors
Prevention
- Tobacco control
- Diet
- Physical activity
- Sun protection
- HPV vaccine
- Limited alcohol use
- Chemoprevention
Detection
- Pap/HPV testing
- Mammography
- Fecal occult blood test
- Colonoscopy
- Lung cancer screening
Diagnosis
- Shared and informed decision making
Treatment
- Curative treatment
- Non-curative treatment
- Adherence
- Symptom management
Survivorship
- Coping
- Health promotion for survivors
Crosscutting Areas
- Communications
- Surveillance
- Health Disparities
- Decision Making
- Implementation Science
- Health Care Delivery
- Epidemiology
- Measurement
Adapted from David B. Abrams, Brown University School of Medicine