| Researchers
Call for Change in Prostate Screening
They propose lowering the PSA protein level at which biopsies to
test for cancer are performed.
The PSA test used to screen for prostate cancer misses as many as
82% of tumors in men under the age of 60 and 65% of those in older
men, according to computer models developed by researchers at Harvard
Medical School.
Their findings
suggest that the chances of detecting a tumor at an early stage
could be improved by lowering the threshold at which further testing,
particularly biopsies, is performed. But critics argue that large
numbers of men already receive unnecessary biopsies as a result
of the PSA and that lowering the threshold would increase the number
undergoing the painful procedure.
The PSA test
measures levels of a protein called prostate-specific antigen in
the blood. Most physicians now recommend further testing when a
man has a PSA level above 4 and a rectal exam suggests the presence
of a tumor.
Dr. Rinaa Punglia
and her colleagues at Harvard studied 6,691 men who had undergone
PSA screening in St. Louis. Only the men with PSA levels above 4
had undergone biopsies. Using mathematical modeling, the team estimated
that large numbers of men who had lower PSA levels had tumors; those
estimates were not confirmed by biopsies. The results are reported
today in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Punglia said
that if biopsies were given to men under 60 who had PSA levels of
2.6 or greater, 64% of tumors would be missed. But the number of
men who would undergo unnecessary biopsies would triple.
The National
Prostate Cancer Coalition recommends using the lower level in men
under 60. Small increases in PSA levels can be more predictive in
younger men, according to coalition spokesman Jamie Bearse.
But in an editorial
in the same issue of the journal, Dutch researchers argued that
there is no evidence that PSA screening actually reduces the risk
of death without simultaneously reducing men's quality of life.
They noted that many prostate tumors grow very slowly and can be
safely ignored.
Prostate cancer
strikes about 189,000 American men each year, killing 30,200.
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