News

PSA Screening Often Unnecessary in Elderly Men


 

CHICAGO — Despite recommendations to the contrary, prostate-specific antigen screening is being performed in many elderly men who are not in good health and have limited life expectancies.

That conclusion was drawn from an analysis of data collected during a cohort study of 597,824 veterans aged 70 years and older who were seen at 104 Veterans Affairs medicalcenters in 2002 and 2003. The subjects did not have a history of prostate cancer, elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, or prostate symptoms.

Most guidelines recommend that PSA screening not be performed in elderly men with a life expectancy of fewer than 10 years—most of those over age 80 years, and men aged 70 years or older in poor health—because the known harms outweigh the potential benefits, Dr. Louise Walter and her associates said at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.

PSA levels are often inaccurate, leading to unnecessary biopsies due to false-positive results. This can cause psychological distress and treatment of irrelevant cancers, which may lead to incontinence or impotence, said Dr. Walter, of the geriatrics division at the University of California, San Francisco, and staff physician at the San Francisco VA Medical Center.

The mean age of the men in the VA-supported study was 77 years, and 333,041 (56%) had a PSA test performed in 2003. Health status was measured with the Charlson-Deyo index using 2002 VA and Medicare claims. The men were stratified into three groups, from best health (score of 0) to worst health (score of 4 or more).

PSA screening rates decreased significantly with advancing age, ranging from 64% in men aged 70–74 years to 27% in men aged 90 or older. But screening rates did not decline with worsening health, she said. Among men aged 85–89 years, 36% in the best-health group had a PSA test, compared with 37% in the worst-health group.

Although men aged 80 years or older in the worst health have less than a 10% chance of living 10 years, 11,391 (41%) of these men had a PSA test.

Recommended Reading

ED Predicts Coronary Disease in European Studies : French and Dutch researchers report that men with ED are at higher risk for cardiovascular events.
MDedge Internal Medicine
Quality of Physician Interaction Aids Compliance With ED Drugs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Vascular Indications Eyed for Erectile Dysfunction Drugs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Urine Test Screens for Bladder Cancer in Hematuria
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prostatitis Can Confound Cancer Risk Assessment
MDedge Internal Medicine
PSA Increase Over Time Predicts Survival in Some Prostate Cancers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Age-Adjusted PSA Velocity Can Detect More Prostate Cancers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lower Target Hemoglobin Has Advantages in CKD : Although treating anemia improves quality of life, higher hemoglobin levels were linked to morbidity.
MDedge Internal Medicine
White Patients More Likely To Receive Kidney Transplant
MDedge Internal Medicine
Looser Criteria Could Bump Up Kidney Transplant Rate
MDedge Internal Medicine