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1997/06/12 -After a careful review of the scientific evidence and issues
surrounding prostate cancer screening, the American Cancer
Society this
week updated its prostate cancer screening guidelines. The new
guidelines
state that "both prostate specific antigen (PSA) and digital
rectal
examination (DRE) should be offered annually, beginning at age
50 years, to
men who have at least a 10-year life expectancy, and to younger
men who are
at high risk. Information should be provided to patients
regarding
potential risks and benefits of intervention." The Society's
previous
guideline recommended that all men age 50 and over receive
annual DRE and
PSA.
The new guideline is supported by narrative intended to
help
patients understand the complexities of obtaining screening for
prostate
cancer. The narrative notes:
Men who choose to undergo screening should begin at age 50
years.
However, men in high risk groups, such as those with a strong
familial
predisposition (e.g. two or more affected first degree
relatives) or
African Americans may begin at a younger age (e.g. 45 years).
More data on
the precise age to start prostate cancer screening are needed
for men at
high risk.
Screening for prostate cancer in asymptomatic men can
detect tumors at
a more favorable stage (anatomic extent of disease). There has
been a
reduction in mortality from prostate cancer, but it has not been
established that this is a direct result of screening.
An abnormal PSA test result has been defined as a value of
above 4.0
ng/ml. Some elevations in PSA may be due to benign conditions of
the
prostate.
The DRE of the prostate should be performed by health care
workers
skilled in recognizing subtle prostate abnormalities, including
those of
symmetry and consistency, as well as the more classic findings
of marked
induration or nodules. DRE is less effective in detecting
prostate cancer
compared with PSA.
There are two important differences between the old and new
guidelines. First, the new guideline reflects research which
notes that
some groups of men may be at higher risk of developing prostate
cancer,
including those that have a strong familial predisposition to
the disease
and African American men. African Americans have a 34% higher
incidence
rate of prostate cancer than white Americans. The second point of
difference between the new and the old guidelines is the
cautionary note
that men should have at least a 10-year life expectancy in order
to receive
these test. This is based on a recognition that prostate cancer
is often a
slow-growing cancer and a man with less than a 10-year life
expectancy is
likely to die of another cause without benefit from detection
and treatment
for his cancer.
"Since 1992, new data have become available that have
impacted the
Society's guideline on the early detection of prostate cancer,"
says
Andrew C. von Eschenbach, MD, chair of the Society's Advisory
Group on
Prostate Cancer and a professor of urology and director of the
Prostate
Cancer Research Program at the University of Texas MD Anderson
Cancer
Center. As with the Society's other guidelines for the early
detection of
cancer, the prostate cancer guideline is based on a review of
the most
current scientific evidence available.
Even though there are no prospective, randomized studies
which
compare the death rates from prostate cancer in men who have
been screened
verus those who have prostate cancer discovered "accidentally"
or because
of symptoms, many physicians believe that screening confers a
benefit. "It
is a general principle of cancer control that early diagnosis is
preferable
to late diagnosis," says Myles Cunningham, MD, president of the
American
Cancer Society. "There is no effective treatment for advanced
stage
prostate cancer, but there is curative treatment for early stage
prostate
cancer." The five-year survival rates for early stage prostate
cancer can
be as high as 99%.
Prostate cancer will be diagnosed in approximately
209,900 men in
the US in 1997. More than 41,000 men will die of the disease,
making
prostate cancer the second leading cause of cancer death in men,
exceeded
only by lung cancer.
The Society's guidelines are recommendations, not rules,
and are meant
to be flexible to accommodate individual medical and personal
needs.
For further information on prostate cancer, or the new
guidelines, call the
American Cancer Society at 1-800-ACS-2345.
Joann Schellenbach
National Director Media Relations
American Cancer Society
212-382-2169
jschelle@cancer.org
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