Studies Don't End Prostate Cancer Test Controversy

No major medical group recommends routine screening because there's no proof that it actually saves lives. That's the question the teams of researchers took on when the studies began in the 1990s.

Both groups are reporting their results a few years early. In the U.S., a panel monitoring the research decided there was enough evidence so far that screening wasn't saving lives and may have been leading to unnecessary treatment with serious side effects.

That study involved 76,693 men ages 55 to 74 from 10 cities. They were assigned to get six annual PSA tests and four digital rectal exams or regular care from their doctors, which could include screening. About half of the men getting usual care ended up getting screened at some point.

After seven to 10 years of follow-up, more cases of prostate cancer were found in the group that got annual screening, but no difference between the groups in the number of cancer deaths. The researchers plan to follow all the men for at least 13 years.

The U.S. researchers cautioned against comparing their results to the European research. Differences in how the studies were done and improvements in treatment may have contributed to the different results, they said.

The European results were based on 162,243 men between 55 and 69 in seven countries. Generally, the men were offered screening every four years or they got none. On average, they were followed for about nine years.

They found that screening lowered the rate of death by 20 percent.

Dr. Fritz Schroder, lead author of the study from the Netherlands' Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, said he believes that the study will show even more lives saved as the men are followed years longer.

The European researchers noted a high risk of overdiagnosis --  the finding and treating of cancers that wouldn't threaten lives. They said 48 additional men would need to be treated to prevent one death from prostate cancer.

"My interpretation of the two studies together is that PSA screening likely does save some lives but does significant more harm," said Dr. Otis Brawley, the American Cancer Society's chief medical officer.

The researchers and others agreed the results bolster advice that screening shouldn't be done in those with a limited life-expectancy. U.S. guidelines issued last year said men over 75 shouldn't be screened; no recommendation was made for younger men but they were advised to discuss the test with their doctor.

What's needed, the researchers said, is a better way to tell which prostate cancers need to be treated.

"When we find prostate cancer, we don't know if it is a killer cancer or what has been termed a toothless lion --  the kind of cancer that men will die with, not of," said the U.S. study's leader, Dr. Gerald Andriole of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. He said the tendency is to treat all patients aggressively.

The U.S. study is part of a National Cancer Institute project; the European study was supported mostly by government and health agencies. Some of the researchers report receiving grants and fees from drugmakers; one holds a patent for a PSA test.

Source: , Associated Press/AP Online
priusguy's picture
I think that until we have a diagnostic between PSA tests and Biopsies this controversy will continue. I have a friend who , with a PSA of 4 had a tumor and underwent surgery. I myself have a PSA in the mid 20's, have had biopsies for over a decade with NO positives ! (right now I'm one of those "watchful waiting" customers ! Perhaps higher resolution, non-invasive imaging will be the ultimate answer.
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