FRIDAY, Jan.
6, 2012 (HealthDay News) — Annual screening for prostate
cancer doesn't save lives, finds a new study that is unlikely to
quell the controversy surrounding routine prostate specific antigen (PSA)
screening.
"Organized
prostate cancer screening when done in addition to whatever
background testing exists in the population does not result in any apparent
benefit, but does result in harm from false positives and over-diagnosis,"
said lead researcher Philip Prorok, from the Division of Cancer Prevention at
the U.S. National Cancer Institute.
"Men considering
prostate cancer screening should be fully informed of the implications of such
testing before making a decision," he added.
Experts have disagreed for
some time on whether the blood test saves lives or results in over-diagnosis
and over-treatment. The new findings, which extend prior results out to 13
years of follow-up, are published in the Jan. 6 online edition of the Journal
of the National Cancer Institute.
The study followed men
enrolled in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening (PLCO)
Trial from 1993 to 2009, comparing results for a group of men who had undergone
screening with those for men who hadn't had testing. The men were 55 to 74
years old.
One group had PSA screening
every year for six years and a digital rectal examination every year for four
years. The other men had regular care, which in some cases included screening
if requested by the patient or doctor.
Compared to men getting
usual care, the screened men had a 12 percent relative increase in prostate
cancer but a slightly lower rate of high-grade cancer.
However, no difference in
deaths was seen between the two groups.
This finding held true even
after age, screening before the trial and other medical conditions were taken
into account, the researchers said.
Prorok said that better
treatment for prostate cancer may explain the similar mortality results.
Among prostate cancer
patients, death from other causes was somewhat higher in the screened group
(10.7 percent of 4,250 men with prostate cancer) compared to the usual care
group (9.9 percent of 3,815 men with prostate cancer).
This indicates men who
underwent PSA screening were over-diagnosed, meaning the test picked up
slow-growing tumors that probably weren't lethal, the researchers said.
"PSA testing and digital rectal
examination screening as conducted in this trial did not reduce
prostate cancer mortality, but there was a persistent excess of prostate cancer
cases in the screened arm, suggesting over-diagnosis of prostate cancer,"
Prorok said.
Some prostate cancer
experts disagree with the authors' conclusions.
Dr. Anthony D'Amico, chief
of radiation oncology at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, said the
results are invalid because the trial was flawed.
According to D'Amico, 52
percent of those who received usual care had a PSA screening. "That's a
serious issue which makes it very hard for the study to show if any benefit
exists for PSA screening," he said.
Also, 15 percent of those
who were supposed to get PSA screening never did, D'Amico said. "So what
you've got is a screening study in which 85 percent of the people got PSA
screened on the screening arm and 52 percent got screened on the control arm,
which makes it impossible to ever measure a difference," he said.
Men should ignore this
study, "because it has no relevance to PSA screening," D'Amico said.
D'Amico said he has more
confidence in the results of a European study published in 2009 in the New
England Journal of Medicine, which showed a 20 percent reduction
in cancer mortality with PSA screening.
Men who can benefit most
from screening are those at risk for prostate cancer, particularly men who have
a family history of prostate cancer, African
Americans and men over 60, D'Amico said.
Prorok acknowledged that
the PLCO trial wasn't perfect. "Nonetheless, the contamination was not
enough to eliminate the early diagnosis of prostate cancers nor the persistent
excess of cancers," he said.
PLCO provides information
about over-diagnosis, Prorok added. "Even if the contamination did dilute
a benefit compared to no screening, the result of no mortality difference
between the arms in PLCO could be interpreted to suggest that more intensive screening
is not beneficial but does result in harm," he said.
Found in:
http://www.everydayhealth.com/prostate-cancer/0106/psa-test-for-prostate-cancer-doesnt-save-lives.aspx?xid=tw_everydayhealth_20120106_psatest
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