The proportion of new cancer patients receiving emergency diagnoses in Morecambe Bay has fallen to its lowest point since the coronavirus pandemic began, new figures show.

Across England, the percentage of cancer patients presenting as an emergency has fallen in the last year – though it remains above pre-pandemic levels, and Cancer Research UK says more must be done to diagnose cancers at an earlier stage and limit emergency presentations.

An emergency presentation is when a diagnosis is given within 30 days of a hospital admission and does not include more managed routes, such as cancer screening or through a GP.

NHS Digital figures show 496 people first presented as having cancer in the NHS Morecambe Bay CCG area between October and December – of them, 76 were deemed to be an emergency.

It meant 15.3 per cent of patients were classed as an emergency – down from 18.2 per cent in the same period in 2020.

This is the lowest proportion of any quarter since the coronavirus pandemic began, and is below the final quarter of 2019, the last before Covid-19.

Nationally, 13,000 of 70,000 total presentations were emergencies between October and December – meaning 18.8 per cent of cancer presentations were an emergency.

This is the lowest of any quarter since the pandemic began but is above the 18.4 per cent between October and December 2019.

Pancreatic cancer had the highest percentage of emergency presentations in October to December nationally, at 57 per cent, followed by acute myeloid leukaemia and central nervous system tumours.

Cancer Research UK said the fall in emergency cancers could reflect a rise in people being diagnosed through regular routes, but also expressed concern that emergency rates remain high.

Dr Ian Walker, executive director of policy at the charity, said: "This is worrying because cancers diagnosed following an emergency presentation are more likely to be at a later stage when fewer treatment options are available.

"Clearly, there’s more work that must be done.

"Cancer must be a priority for the new Secretary of State for Health and Social Care."

Dr Walker called on the Government to publish a 10-year cancer plan, including a target that less than 10 per cent of cancer cases be diagnosed through emergency routes by 2032.

The Department of Health and Social Care said it is "improving outcomes from cancer patients across England" by reducing waiting times and addressing the Covid backlog.

"We are making good progress on our target to have 75 per cent of patients diagnosed or have cancer ruled out within 28 days following an urgent GP referral for suspected cancer, with nearly 71% reached in May," a spokesman said.

"We are rolling out up to 160 community diagnostic centres across the country, with 90 already open and 1 million scans delivered, along with 91 surgical hubs to boost capacity."