More than 100 fewer cancer cases were diagnosed in Blackburn with Darwen in 2020, new figures show – a year which also saw a fall in the proportion found at an early stage.

In the former NHS Blackburn with Darwen CCG area, there were 648 cancers diagnosed in 2020 – 150 fewer than the year before, when there were 798 diagnoses, according to latest figures from NHS Digital.

Of those that were diagnosed, lung cancer was the most common, accounting for 15.6 per cent of diagnoses.

This was followed by breast (13.1 per cent) and prostate (9.7 per cent) cancer.

The figures also show that alongside a drop in the number of cases diagnosed in Blackburn with Darwen, the proportion found at an early stage fell too – 43.6 per cent of cancer with a valid stage were diagnosed early in 2020, down from 52.9 per cent in 2019.

Across England, there were roughly 40,400 fewer cancers diagnosed in 2020, while the early diagnosis rate also dropped to 51.9 per cent from 54.5 per cent in 2019.

Cancer Research UK has urged the government to improve outcomes for people with cancer and take services in England from being “world-lagging to world-leading”.

Jon Shelton, head of cancer intelligence at Cancer Research UK, said the coronavirus pandemic caused huge disruption to cancer care, but added that a “crisis” facing cancer services was accelerated rather than caused by it.

He said: “We have been sounding the alarm in the importance of early diagnosis for years.

“Right now, the government is falling short of its manifesto promise of improving cancer outcomes in the UK and significantly improving cancers diagnosed at their earliest stage.

“We need Steve Barclay to step up and commit to a comprehensive and fully-funded 10-year cancer plan which transforms our cancer services from world-lagging to world-leading.”

A fall in the national early diagnosis rare in 2020 followed two years of improvement – though the figure is yet to return to the high of 54.6 per cent seen in 2014.

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social care did not respond to the cancer diagnosis figures, but said the department is “laser focussed” on tackling cancer waiting lists across England, adding that 160 community diagnostic centres are being rolled out in a bid to tackle the backlogs caused by the pandemic.

“These one-stop shops have already delivered over 2.7 million life-saving tests, checks and scans,” they added.

“We continue to do all we can to fight cancer and we recently announced a new partnership with BioNTech to boost research into vaccines for cancer with the potential to transform outcomes for cancer patients.”

In July 2022, clinical commissioning groups were abolished and replaced with integrated care boards across England.

Lancashire and South Cumbria Integrated Care Board had nobody available to comment.