Tellenbach
in dreamland
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- Oct 27, 2013
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I'm reading "The Great Prostate Hoax" by Richard Ablin. Dr. Ablin, a pathologist, discovered PSA (prostate specific antigen) and he's warning men of the dangers of PSA screening. There are four main arguments against PSA screening:
1. PSA can't diagnose cancer because it is prostate specific, not prostate cancer specific. PSA is present in healthy and cancerous prostates. Furthermore, the level of PSA can be increased by activities such as bike riding, sex, an infection, or an enlarged prostate.
2. People with low PSA levels (0.5 ng/mL) can have cancer and people with high PSA levels (>4 ng/mL) can have no cancer. The current level of concern (4 ng/mL) is an arbitrary value meant to catch "low hanging fruit".
3. The PSA test can't distinguish between aggressive and non-aggressive prostate cancer.
4. Prostate cancer is age related and 65% of men without any symptoms will test positive for prostate cancer when biopsied.
Each year, a million biopsies are performed and 100,000 men undergo prostate removal surgery (radical prostatectomies). The evidence that's trickling out suggests that there is no difference in survival rates between men who get the surgery and men who don't get it.
In 2009, the results of two PSA studies were published in the New England Journal of Medicine:
Mortality Results from a Randomized Prostate-Cancer Screening Trial
This is the major finding:
Prostate removal surgery is no small matter. It causes incontinence (which requires wearing diapers that need to be changed 10 times/day) and impotence in many men.
This is what the US Preventive Services Task Force had to say:
So why do urologists still support PSA screening? It's estimated that half of urology centers would close if not for the profits from prostatectomies.
1. PSA can't diagnose cancer because it is prostate specific, not prostate cancer specific. PSA is present in healthy and cancerous prostates. Furthermore, the level of PSA can be increased by activities such as bike riding, sex, an infection, or an enlarged prostate.
2. People with low PSA levels (0.5 ng/mL) can have cancer and people with high PSA levels (>4 ng/mL) can have no cancer. The current level of concern (4 ng/mL) is an arbitrary value meant to catch "low hanging fruit".
3. The PSA test can't distinguish between aggressive and non-aggressive prostate cancer.
4. Prostate cancer is age related and 65% of men without any symptoms will test positive for prostate cancer when biopsied.
Each year, a million biopsies are performed and 100,000 men undergo prostate removal surgery (radical prostatectomies). The evidence that's trickling out suggests that there is no difference in survival rates between men who get the surgery and men who don't get it.
In 2009, the results of two PSA studies were published in the New England Journal of Medicine:
Mortality Results from a Randomized Prostate-Cancer Screening Trial
This is the major finding:
However, we now know that prostate-cancer screening provided no reduction in death rates at 7 years and that no indication of a benefit appeared with 67% of the subjects having completed 10 years of follow-up. Thus, our results support the validity of the recent recommendations of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, especially against screening all men over the age of 75 years.
Prostate removal surgery is no small matter. It causes incontinence (which requires wearing diapers that need to be changed 10 times/day) and impotence in many men.
This is what the US Preventive Services Task Force had to say:
The bottom line is that science tells us there is very little benefit and significant harms associated with mass routine screening. Before a man goes ahead with PSA testing, he needs to be fully aware of what he's getting into, and currently that is not how it's being done. Virginia Moyer, MD
So why do urologists still support PSA screening? It's estimated that half of urology centers would close if not for the profits from prostatectomies.