New data fuel debate over prostate cancer screening

The new results were published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. Two of Schroder’s co-authors hold a patent for a PSA test, and one is receiving royalties from it.

One in six American men will get prostate cancer during their lifetime, although only a minority of them will die from the disease.

The PSA test is given annually to millions of American men, but more and more experts question whether it’s worth the money and the false alarms it triggers in about half the people flagged by the test.

The government-backed U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has proposed a recommendation against prostate cancer screening for men with no symptoms.

Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, said the European study is actually eight studies in eight countries, and only in Sweden and the Netherlands did PSA testing significantly reduce the risk of death from prostate cancer.

When prostate cancer doesn’t increase PSA

Some prostate cancers, particularly those that grow quickly, may not produce much PSA. In this case, you might have what’s known as a “false-negative” — a test result that incorrectly indicates you don’t have prostate cancer when you do.

Because of the complexity of these relating factors, it’s important that a doctor experienced in interpreting PSA levels evaluates your situation.

“Screening saves lives if you live in the Netherlands and Sweden, but not the other six places,” he told Reuters Health in a telephone interview.

One factor that may have skewed the Swedish data, he said, is that men who were screened were treated at an academic medical center, while men in the control group who developed cancer were treated elsewhere in the community. That alone might account for the lower mortality rate in the PSA population.

In all, there were 299 prostate cancer deaths in the screening group compared to 462 in the control group that was not screened.

Brawley said PSA testing is being widely promoted because “there’s a huge profit in screening and treatment” for prostate cancer, even though most studies have failed to show that screening saves lives.

In part because the risk from pursuing false alarms is so high,” no professional organization recommends routine screening for people over 50, regardless of family history,” he said.

Schroder said guidelines from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, the European Association of Urology, and American Urological Association “provide a sensible recommendation: men who wish to be examined need to be carefully informed with balanced views and answers to their questions before they take a decision to be screened.”

In an editorial, public health expert Dr. Anthony Miller of the University of Toronto, said it would be “unwise” to intensify PSA testing.

“I think it would be advisable to follow the preliminary recommendations of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force,” he wrote.

SOURCE: New England Journal of Medicine, online March 14, 2012.

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Prostate-Cancer Mortality at 11 Years of Follow-up
Results

After a median follow-up of 11 years in the core age group, the relative reduction in the risk of death from prostate cancer in the screening group was 21% (rate ratio, 0.79; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.68 to 0.91; P=0.001), and 29% after adjustment for noncompliance. The absolute reduction in mortality in the screening group was 0.10 deaths per 1000 person-years or 1.07 deaths per 1000 men who underwent randomization. The rate ratio for death from prostate cancer during follow-up years 10 and 11 was 0.62 (95% CI, 0.45 to 0.85; P=0.003). To prevent one death from prostate cancer at 11 years of follow-up, 1055 men would need to be invited for screening and 37 cancers would need to be detected. There was no significant between-group difference in all-cause mortality.

Fritz H. Schröder, M.D., Jonas Hugosson, M.D., Monique J. Roobol, Ph.D., Teuvo L.J. Tammela, M.D., Stefano Ciatto, M.D., Vera Nelen, M.D., Maciej Kwiatkowski, M.D., Marcos Lujan, M.D., Hans Lilja, M.D., Marco Zappa, Ph.D., Louis J. Denis, M.D., Franz Recker, M.D., Alvaro Páez, M.D., Liisa Määttänen, Ph.D., Chris H. Bangma, M.D., Gunnar Aus, M.D., Sigrid Carlsson, M.D., Arnauld Villers, M.D., Xavier Rebillard, M.D., Theodorus van der Kwast, M.D., Paula M. Kujala, M.D., Bert G. Blijenberg, Ph.D., Ulf-Hakan Stenman, M.D., Andreas Huber, M.D., Kimmo Taari, M.D., Matti Hakama, Ph.D., Sue M. Moss, Ph.D., Harry J. de Koning, M.D., and Anssi Auvinen, M.D. for the ERSPC Investigators

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