PSA Testing: What Should Men Do?

Fallout from 2 studies, pro and con, has experts in a quandry

Posted: March 19, 2009

By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 19 (HealthDay News) -- In the wake of yesterday's publication of two major studies on the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test to detect prostate cancer -- one finding that it didn't save lives and another finding that it did -- American men may be wondering if the test is still worth taking.

The studies, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, probably won't end the long controversy surrounding a blood test that millions of men have routinely been taking for years.

While an elevated PSA reading may indicate a life-threatening cancer, it may also detect much slower moving tumors that would never cause death. Because doctors cannot yet tell the difference, treatments are often ordered that can impair men's quality of life -- causing many experts to worry that the PSA test is overused.

The American Cancer Society, for one, does not currently recommend routine PSA screening for all men.

"We stopped mentioning screening in 1997, and since then have been for 'informed decision-making,'" said Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer of the society. "We recommend that the physician should offer the test and inform men of the potential risk and potential benefit of screening."

One of the NEJM studies, which followed almost 80,000 American men for seven years, found no reduction in prostate cancer deaths among those who had regular PSA tests, compared to men who made no special attempt to have such tests. But the other study, which included 182,000 European men, found a 20 percent lowering of prostate cancer deaths among men who had such screening.

"At least initially, these won't change our recommendations," said the ACS' Brawley. However, "we will get our prostate cancer advisory committee together to consider the issue," he added.

According to Brawley, men at higher risk of prostate cancer, such as those with a family history and African-Americans, should have that conversation with a physician at age 45, while most men can wait until age 50.

African-American men have a higher incidence of prostate cancer and a higher risk of dying of the malignancy.

But Dr. Judd Moul, director of the Duke University Prostate Center, sees flaws in the U.S. study (which argued against a mortality benefit) that he believes invalidate its findings.

"In the American study, the control group was under routine medical care, and in that control group, half the men had PSA screening," Moul said. "So, it was screening versus 'semi'-screening."

In addition, there was no provision in the American study that men with high PSA levels should seek treatment, Moul said. "It's not a screening test if it isn't followed up with treatment," he said.

Moul has an admittedly personal interest in the subject, since his father-in-law died of prostate cancer. And, he said, he has vivid memories of the pre-PSA-test era, when most men with the disease were only diagnosed at an advanced, tough-to-treat stage.

"I don't want to go back to the days when I had patients all over the ward dying of painful metastatic prostate cancer," Moul said.

And so, he prefers the recommendation of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, formed by major U.S. cancer centers, that all men have an initial PSA test at age 40, which would indicate their risk of developing prostate cancer, with follow-up testing at age 45. "After age 50, I would follow the recommendation of the American Cancer Society," Moul said.

And PSA testing should certainly stop at age 70, said Dr. Derek Raghavan, chairman of the Cleveland Clinic's Taussig Cancer Institute -- but with one caveat. If previous annual tests have shown a rising level of PSA, a protein produced by the prostate, testing should continue, Raghavan said.

"The studies certainly have added fuel to the controversy about PSA testing," Raghavan said. It is a controversy that starts with the knowledge that a PSA test is not cancer-specific. A high reading must be followed by a biopsy to find if cancer is present.

A finding of cancer also opens the door to a second level of controversy, because prostate tumors are notoriously variable. Some can grow aggressively and fatally. Many grow so slowly that they are no danger to life. But no test currently available can tell the difference between a life-threatening and an indolent prostate cancer.

Prostate Cancer

I am 50 years old. I had a radical prostatectomy a year ago October. My gleason score was 7 and the cancer was contained in the prostate. My PSA continues to be 0 one year later.

My dad passed away from prostate cancer at age 61. I am thankful for having the PSA test. It saved my life.

As of today, there are no continence problems and erections are pretty good! Most of the time, they are great but sometimes I do need a little assistance from Cialis or something.

Overall, I feel lucky that my cancer was caught early due to the PSA test. Because my dad died at 61 and my gleason score was semi aggressive at age 48, there is a very strong chance that I would not live past 60 if I had not been proactive.

It bothers me when I hear about some doctors saying that the PSA test should be thrown away. It's far from perfect but it does save many lives.

Joe Murcar of WA @ Nov 28, 2009 23:41:14 PM

Prostate Policy

It's hard to argue that some information, however imperfect, is worse than no information. It's more reasonable to argue about what happens after the information is in hand.

Since the PSA test itself is not expensive, it's equally hard to argue against prostate cancer screening. This is even true if a positive result may potentially lead to inappropriate, unnecessary and, not incidentally, expensive measures (because sometimes those measures actually are life-saving).

So one should argue not against the test, but against society paying for further measures after the positive test result is known, except under certain well defined criteria. Beyond those criteria is where personal choice should enter either by the preemptive purchase of an add-on insurance policy that specifically covers such further unsanctioned measures, or by paying out-of-pocket for those measures.

The PSA testing "dilemma" provides a perfect example of a reason why liberty-loving citizens should be very wary of one- size-fits-all national health planning that may eliminate personal choice as a factor in decision making.

Richard of MN @ Sep 01, 2009 16:44:16 PM

PSA TESTING

I am now 67 and have had the annual PSA test for years. While my numbers were very low for years, suddenly they started rising - VERY rapidly. Although the DRE were always normal, my urologist indicated that only two things could account for the rapid rise (up to 10); cancer or chronic infection. Antibiotic treatment had no affect, so I had a biopsy, which was negative for cancer cells. My PSA continued to rise rapidly,so another ultrasound-guided biopsy was performed. The biopsy is no big deal, believe me. However, I experienced a serious E. coli infection from the second biopsy, requiring hospitalization on IV antiobiotics. Because my PSA continued to rise, I had a third biopsy. While the results were still negative, I got another E. coli infection which required 3 days in the hospital on IV antibiotics. Bottom line for me is that I now know with relative certainty (from 36 negative cores) that I do NOT have cancer. I am told that my experience with E. coli infections resulting from the ultrasound-guided biopsies was totally anomalous.

I am very glad to know with about as much certainty as you can have in medicine that I do not have cancer and consider the trade-off well worth while.

Bill Bennett of CO @ Mar 25, 2009 18:52:45 PM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

U.S. News Rankings & Research

Best Hospitals

See the best hospitals, and the best children's hospitals, in specialties from cancer to urology.

Best Health Plans

U.S. News and NCQA review over 700 health insurance plans in the Best Health Plan rankings.

Best Nursing Homes

The Best Nursing Homes rankings feature data on 15,000-plus homes. Search for one near you.

Diseases & Conditions

Get information on preventing, treating, and managing diseases and conditions. Centers:

advertisement

Sponsored Poll

What factor do you think is responsible for the majority of teen-driving crashes?

View Results

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!