As a surgical oncologist for three decades, I have watched the same painful story repeat itself thousands of times. A patient arrives with a Stage 3 or Stage 4 cancer that was almost certainly Stage 1 a year or two ago — and screening would have caught it then. Screening is the cheapest, simplest, most effective intervention in all of oncology. This guide tells you exactly what to do.
Screening is not the same as diagnostic testing. Screening means looking for cancer in a person who has no symptoms. This is deliberate, because by the time most cancers cause symptoms, they have already grown to a stage where cure is harder. Screening catches them before the body even knows they exist.
The Seven Cancers Worth Screening For
Of the hundreds of types of cancer, only a handful meet the criteria for population screening: they must be common enough to justify the test, slow-growing enough that catching them early changes outcomes, and have a reliable, affordable, safe test available. These are the seven that matter for adults in India:
Self-examination has limitations and does not replace mammography — but it teaches you what is normal for your own breasts, so changes become obvious. The single most important habit a woman can develop in her 20s.
India accounts for nearly a quarter of all cervical cancer deaths worldwide — almost all of which could be prevented with vaccination of adolescent girls and regular screening of adult women. If you have an adolescent daughter, get her vaccinated. If you are an adult woman, get a Pap smear or HPV test.
Colorectal cancer almost always starts as a polyp — a small growth that takes 5–10 years to become cancer. A colonoscopy removes polyps as it finds them, literally preventing cancer from forming. There is no other cancer where the screening test is also the treatment.
Chest X-ray does NOT screen for lung cancer effectively — only low-dose CT does. If your hospital says they will "screen with an X-ray," they are not actually screening. Equally important: quitting smoking now is more powerful than any screening test ever invented.
Prostate cancer screening is genuinely controversial because many prostate cancers grow so slowly they never cause problems. Discussion with a doctor is more important than blanket testing. If you have a family history or are over 50, have the conversation.
Oral cancer is the only cancer you can see with a mirror. If you chew tobacco, smoke, or drink heavily, examine your mouth monthly under good light. Any white or red patch lasting more than 2 weeks needs a doctor's eye. Stopping tobacco prevents 90% of oral cancers — no other intervention comes close.
If you have ever been told you have hepatitis B or C and have not had a liver ultrasound in the last 6 months, please book one this week. Liver cancer is silent until late stages — but in high-risk patients, regular surveillance catches it early.
Your Age-Based Screening Timeline
If you remember nothing else from this article, remember this table. Print it. Pin it on your fridge. Share it on your family WhatsApp group. These are the screening milestones that prevent cancer deaths.
9–14
20–25
25–30
30–40
40–45
45–50
50–60
60–75
75+
The single most cost-effective health investment any adult can make in India is regular screening. A ₹3,000 mammography or ₹15,000 colonoscopy every few years can prevent a ₹15 lakh cancer treatment — and more importantly, save a life that means everything to your family.
If You Are Higher Risk — Start Earlier and Screen More Often
The schedules above are for average-risk adults. If any of the following apply to you, screening should start earlier and happen more often. Discuss with a doctor:
- First-degree relative (parent, sibling, child) with breast, ovarian, colorectal, prostate, or pancreatic cancer — especially diagnosed before age 50
- Multiple relatives with the same cancer or related cancers
- Known genetic mutation — BRCA1/2, Lynch syndrome, Li-Fraumeni, FAP
- Previous radiation therapy to chest, abdomen, or pelvis
- Chronic hepatitis B or C infection or cirrhosis
- Previous cancer — even if cured, screening needs are different
- Heavy tobacco use (cigarettes, beedi, gutka, paan with tobacco)
- Heavy alcohol intake (more than 2 drinks/day)
- Obesity, diabetes, sedentary lifestyle — increases multiple cancer risks
- Occupational exposures — asbestos, certain chemicals, radiation
If two or more apply to you, please consider a specialist screening consultation rather than relying on routine general check-ups. The screening protocols for high-risk individuals are individualised and often require expert oversight.
What is NOT Useful as a Cancer Screening Test
The Indian health market is full of expensive packages marketed as "cancer screening" that actually do very little to detect cancer early. These three myths deserve direct correction:
"Tumour markers" as a screening test
Blood tests like CA-125, CEA, AFP, CA-19-9, CA-15-3, PSA are sometimes sold as "cancer screening" packages. They are NOT effective screening tests in healthy people. Most have low sensitivity (miss many cancers) and low specificity (false alarms in benign conditions). They are useful for monitoring known cancers — not for finding them in healthy individuals.
Exception: PSA in men over 50 (with proper interpretation) and AFP in known hepatitis carriers.
Whole-body PET-CT as annual screening
PET-CT is an excellent test for staging known cancers, but as routine screening it causes significant radiation exposure (equivalent to many years of background radiation) and yields too many false positives leading to unnecessary further tests, biopsies, and anxiety. Whole-body PET-CT is not recommended as routine cancer screening.
X-ray chest for lung cancer screening
Chest X-ray was once recommended for lung cancer screening; modern evidence has firmly shown it does NOT save lives. Lung cancer screening for smokers must be done with low-dose CT (LDCT). If a clinic offers "X-ray screening" for lung cancer, they are using outdated science.
The Cancers You Can Actually Prevent
Screening finds cancer early. Prevention stops it from ever forming. These three actions prevent more cancers in India than any screening programme could ever detect:
1. The HPV Vaccine — A Cancer Vaccine Already Exists
It still surprises many people to learn that we have a vaccine that prevents cancer. The HPV vaccine prevents cervical cancer, most anal cancers, many throat cancers, and some penile cancers. It works best given before sexual exposure — ideally at age 9–14, with catch-up vaccination useful up to 26 and sometimes beyond.
In India, the vaccine has been available privately for over a decade and is now being rolled out in public programmes for adolescent girls. If you have an adolescent daughter or son, vaccinate them. No cancer prevention intervention in history has been more clearly proven.
2. Stopping Tobacco — In All Forms
Tobacco causes 14 different cancers — lung, mouth, throat, oesophagus, bladder, pancreas, kidney, and more. In India, chewed tobacco, gutka, paan with tobacco, and beedi are as dangerous as cigarettes — sometimes worse. Stopping tobacco at any age dramatically reduces cancer risk. Within 10 years of quitting, lung cancer risk drops by half.
If you use tobacco in any form, stopping is the single most powerful cancer-prevention action you can take. More powerful than any screening test, supplement, diet, or vaccine.
3. Hepatitis B Vaccination & Treatment
Hepatitis B causes liver cancer. The hepatitis B vaccine — given in three doses — prevents the infection that leads to most cases of liver cancer in India. It is part of the routine childhood immunisation programme now, but adults who were not vaccinated as children should consider it, especially healthcare workers and people with chronic medical conditions.
If you already have hepatitis B or C, modern antiviral treatment can dramatically reduce your liver cancer risk. Speak to a hepatologist.
The India Context — Cost, Access, Government Schemes
What screening actually costs
Mammography: ₹1,500–3,000 · Pap smear: ₹500–1,500 · HPV test: ₹2,500–4,500 · Colonoscopy: ₹8,000–25,000 · Low-dose CT chest: ₹4,000–8,000 · HPV vaccine (Cervavac/Gardasil): ₹2,000–10,000 per dose · Liver ultrasound: ₹800–2,000 · Hepatitis B vaccine: ₹250–800 per dose
Costs are significant but vastly cheaper than treating advanced cancer. Government and semi-government options that reduce cost include:
- Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) — covers many cancer treatments and some screening tests for eligible families
- Mahatma Phule Jan Arogya Yojana — Maharashtra state scheme with cancer coverage
- Tata Memorial Centre (Mumbai) — heavily subsidised cancer screening and treatment
- State cancer screening camps — periodic free mammography and Pap smear camps
- Corporate health checkups — most include several screening tests; ensure they include the right ones (mammography, Pap, FIT) rather than only the useless tumour markers
Putting It All Together — Your Personal Action Plan
You do not need to do everything tomorrow. You need to start. Here is the simplest possible action plan:
This week: Identify your age group from the timeline above. Write down which screening tests you should have had but haven't. Make one phone call to book one missing test.
This month: Complete that first overdue test. If you use tobacco, take the first concrete step to stop — talk to a doctor, get nicotine replacement, set a quit date.
This year: Get your full age-appropriate screening package up to date. If you have adolescent children, get them HPV vaccinated. If you have parents over 50, gently encourage them to complete their screening too.
Going forward: Add screening to your annual life calendar the same way you add tax filing or vehicle insurance renewal. Make it normal. Make it routine. Make it boring. That is exactly when it works best.
I have never met a patient who regretted being screened. I have met many who deeply regretted that they were not screened sooner. The difference between those two groups is often a single phone call or a single appointment that was postponed for "later" and never happened.
Book a Comprehensive Screening Assessment
Dr. Vinod T. Gore offers personalised cancer screening consultations — assessing your individual risk profile, family history, and lifestyle to recommend the right screening tests for you. Suitable for families wanting a comprehensive risk review, including HPV vaccination guidance for children and high-risk consultation for those with family history of cancer.
About the Author: Dr. Vinod T. Gore is a Senior Surgical Oncologist with over 30 years of experience and a strong advocate of cancer prevention and screening in India. Trained at Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai and FARIS Edinburgh. Recipient of the ET Onco Frontiers Trailblazer in Oncology 2025 and Navbharat Times Best Robotic Oncosurgeon 2024. Department Head of Surgical Oncology at Sahyadri Manipal Hospital, Pune.
Disclaimer: Screening recommendations are general guidelines for average-risk adults. Your individual screening plan should be personalised by a qualified doctor based on your family history, risk factors, and health status. This article does not substitute personal medical advice.
References: Indian Council of Medical Research Cancer Atlas; National Cancer Grid India guidelines; US Preventive Services Task Force recommendations; American Cancer Society 2024 screening guidelines; WHO Global Strategy for Cervical Cancer Elimination.