News

Would Advanced Prostate Cancer Triple Without PSA Screening?


 

FROM CANCER

"In particular, we could not determine the number of men who would need to undergo a biopsy for an elevated PSA and [be] treated for screen-detected prostate cancer to prevent one case of presenting with metastatic disease. This must be recognized as a limitation of the current study," the researchers said. Likewise, they could not investigate the optimal age to start or to stop screening.

This study was supported by the Ashley Family Foundation. No financial disclosures were reported.

Pages

Recommended Reading

QoL Steadies 15 Years After Prostate Cancer Treatments
MDedge Family Medicine
Most Cancer Survivors Aren't Exercising Enough
MDedge Family Medicine
Melanoma In Situ Diagnoses Ramping Up
MDedge Family Medicine
2-D Echo Is Inadequate Cardiomyopathy Screen in Childhood Cancer Survivors
MDedge Family Medicine
ASCO Weighs in on PSA Screening Controversy
MDedge Family Medicine
Surgery Didn't Cut Mortality from PSA-Detected Prostate Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Invasive SCC Rates Doubled in Last 20 Years
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA Approves mTOR Inhibitor Everolimus for Breast Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Cultivate 'Distress Tolerance' for Early-Stage Prostate Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Traffic-Related Toxins Linked to Childhood Kidney Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine