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VA RESEARCH: MANY MEN GETTING UNNECESSARY
PROSTATE CANCER BLOOD TESTS -- In many cases,
these
screenings are being done in populations of
either young
or elderly men where the test has not proven
beneficial.

Story here...
http://www.forbes.com/
forbeslife/health/feeds/hscout/2
007/07/09/hscout606249.html
Story below:
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Many Men Getting Unnecessary Prostate Cancer
Blood Tests
(HealthDay News) -- Too many American men are receiving inappropriate
PSA (prostate-specific antigen) blood tests for prostate cancer,
researchers say.
In many cases, these screenings are being done in populations of either
young or elderly men where the test has not proven beneficial, the
experts report in the July 9 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
"PSA screening is performed inappropriately in a great proportion in
many cases," said lead author Dr. B. Price Kerfoot, from the Veterans
Affairs Boston Healthcare System and Harvard Medical School.
For example, most current guidelines do not recommend PSA screening for
men younger than 40 years of age, older than 75, or for men who are
expected to live less than another 10 years, Kerfoot said. But many men
in these groups are nonetheless getting the tests, the study found.
The American Cancer Society notes that, outside of skin cancer, prostate
cancer is the most common form of cancer diagnosed among American men.
This year nearly 220,000 new cases of the disease are expected to be
diagnosed, and about 27,000 men will die of the disease.
The organization currently recommends that men at high risk for prostate
cancer, which includes blacks and men with a family or personal history
of the disease, should begin undergoing yearly digital rectal exams and
PSA blood tests between the ages of 40 and 45. Otherwise, men with
average risk should begin screening at age 50, the society suggests.
In the study, Kerfoot's team collected data on almost 106,000 men
treated at Veterans Health Affairs facilities across New England from
1997 to 2004.
Of the more than 232,000 PSA tests given, 16.1 percent were found to be
unnecessary, the researchers found. Among this group, 15.3 percent were
given to men older than 75, and 0.8 percent were given to patients
younger than 40.
Profiling the doctors who ordered these tests, the team found that 51.3
percent were men, 79.4 percent were general practitioners, 53.4 percent
were trainee physicians and 8.2 percent were urologists.
In addition, older male doctors were more likely to order inappropriate
PSA tests, Kerfoot said. Female doctors fared better. "As female
practitioners age, the appropriateness of their screening increases," he
said.
Kerfoot believes the new data may help cut down on unnecessary PSA
tests. "The goal is to design educational programs that will teach the
practitioners how to use PSA screening more consistently in an
age-appropriate manner," he said.
The diagnostic value of PSA remains controversial, Kerfoot noted. There
are several trials ongoing that over the next 10 years may help to
determine whether the current guidelines need to be changed, he said.
One expert agreed that the PSA test is often misunderstood.
"I am not sure that we use PSA correctly," said Dr. Anthony D'Amico, the
chief of radiation oncology at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston.
PSA level is affected by many other factors besides cancer, including an
enlarged prostate or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). This means that
PSA results can lead to an overdiagnosis of prostate cancer, D'Amico
said. "It can also lead to missing cancer in younger men," he said.
According to D'Amico, changes in PSA levels over time -- rather than a
snapshot look from just one test -- are the key to using the screen
correctly. He expects guidelines to change this year to reflect this new
method. "When you look at change in PSA level, you can easily
distinguish benign versus malignant tissue," he said.
For men in their 40s, a steady rise of PSA of more than half-a-point a
year is a probable indication of prostate cancer, D'Amico said. In men
in their 60s or 70s, a rise of one point or more may be an indication of
prostate cancer, he said. "But once BPH starts, PSA readings become less
predictive, especially for older men," he added.
One expert believes that PSA should only be used alongside other factors
in diagnosing prostate cancer -- regardless of the man's age.
"It isn't fair that a healthy 75 year-old should be denied a PSA exam"
based on his life expectancy, said Dr. Ian M. Thompson, from the
department of urology at the University of Texas Health Science Center
at San Antonio. "Many older men have more than a 10-year life
expectancy," he added.
Thompson believes that PSA testing should be a part of a total patient
evaluation that includes age, a family history of prostate cancer, and
whether or not the patient has had a previous biopsy for prostate
cancer.
"Men need to read up on the advantages and disadvantages of PSA
screening," Thompson said. "Guidelines are only guidelines," he said.
Thompson noted that half the men who die from prostate cancer are in
their 80s.
"To just say that after 75 you can't have a PSA test doesn't fit with
what we know about the biology of the disease, the frequency of the
disease, and the risk of the disease," Thompson said.
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Larry Scott --