Pink ribbons are fluttering in the wind across Europe today for International Breast Cancer Awareness Day, and the world faces a sobering paradox: breast cancer rates are climbing, yet deaths from the disease are dropping, thanks to breakthroughs in detection and treatment.
Under the 2025 theme “Every Story is Unique, Every Journey Matters“, events from webinars to survivor walks are increasing calls for equitable care, which highlight how Europe’s ageing population leads to more cases while innovative therapies are saving lives.
Breast cancer is on the increase globally
The World Health Organisation (WHO) kicked off the month on October 1 with its Third Global Breast Cancer Initiative Partners Meeting, launching a training manual to aid in early detection in underserved areas. “Every minute, four women are diagnosed with breast cancer worldwide, and one woman dies from the disease, and these statistics are worsening,” warned Dr Joanne Kim, an IARC scientist, during the event. In Europe, the numbers reveal the urgency: the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) estimates 604,900 new cases in the WHO Europe region for 2022, a figure projected to increase with demographic shifts.
How come breast cancer rates are levelling out in the UK?
Incidence rates are stabilising in wealthier Northern and Western nations like the UK and Sweden, where age-standardised rates hover around 100 to 120 per 100,000 women, but increasing in Eastern and Southern Europe due to lifestyle factors such as rising obesity and alcohol use, delayed childbearing, and uneven screening access. Europe’s median age of 41.9 years exacerbates this situation; half of cases strike women aged 45–69, according to the European Cancer Information System (ECIS). “The increased prevalence of overweight and obesity over the last few decades… has led to an increased risk of breast cancer,” says Prof. Carlo La Vecchia of the University of Milan in recent analyses.
Breast cancer mortality rate has dropped overall in Europe
Yet, there is a glimmer of hope in mortality data. The EU has dramatically reduced breast cancer death rates by 30 per cent since 1990 and has averted the loss of over 373,000 lives through expanded mammography testing campaigns and targeted drugs like HER2 inhibitors. A March 2025 study in Annals of Oncology forecasts a 4 per cent EU-wide fall by the end of this year, to 13.3 deaths per 100,000 women, with more dramatic improvements in the 50 to 69 age group (-9.8 per cent). The total of deaths might have increased modestly to 90,000 from 85,000 in 2020, however the UK has done better than its neighbours with a projected 6 per cent decline overall, and even a 7 per cent fall for women over 80.
Global initiatives in breast cancer awareness
The EU’s Beating Cancer Plan, which aims at 90 per cent screening coverage by 2025, is central to progress in Europe. Initiatives like Switzerland’s PINK CUBE Roadshow offer free exams in rural spots, while the Lobular Breast Cancer Alliance‘s Global Awareness Day on October 15 highlighted the 15 per cent of cases missed by standard mammograms.
Survivors like Dutch musician Floor Jansen are a perfect example of the theme’s spirit. “GO! And for the men reading this: remind your wife, girlfriend, mother, or sister to go and get checked,” she urged in a heartfelt post. As October unfolds with “Pink Warriors” dragon boat races in Malaysia and poetry slams in the Ivory Coast, advocates stress prevention: limit alcohol, maintain a healthy weight, and screen early.
This Awareness Month isn’t just about pink ribbons. It’s a rallying cry to bridge disparities, ensuring every European woman’s journey ends in survival. And it isn’t just awareness for women. It’s for men too, who should be nudging their partners, wives, mothers, sisters, nagging them to get checked out. With trends edging towards fewer deaths, the focus intensifies, turning increased diagnoses into life.


