Prostate, Ovarian Cancer Screening: When to Test? Not So Clear

Recent studies give no clear guidance on screening for ovarian and prostate cancers

By Katherine Hobson

Posted: March 18, 2009

Cancer screening is in the news again. Researchers said last week that they had some potentially encouraging news about methods for screening for ovarian cancer, though it is far too early to endorse their use. Now, in the New England Journal of Medicine, two teams of researchers are reporting preliminary—and apparently conflicting—results from ongoing trials studying how well screening for prostate cancer works. One study found a potential benefit; the other, none. It makes for confusing headlines, and consumers might be left wondering: What am I to do? Here's a primer to help you make sense of the evidence.

To start with the most recent news: What's going on with screening using the prostate specific antigen test?

It may surprise you to know that while most men over 50 have had a PSA test, there is currently no solid evidence that doing so can save lives. There has been much anticipation about the results of two large trials studying this question, and this week we got some early reports. (Both trials will continue for several years with the aim of producing final conclusions.) One study, done in the United States, found no reduction in mortality over about 11 years from a screening program that uses the PSA test and a digital rectal exam; the other, in Europe, using just the PSA test, found a 20 percent relative drop in the death rate from prostate cancer after nine years. That translated to about 7 fewer deaths from prostate cancer for every 10,000 men screened.

The take-away: well, not much. Most public health groups still recommend the PSA at least be offered to men over 50, with an accompanying explanation of its risks and benefits. Men with a life expectancy of less than seven to 10 years probably don't need to undergo PSA testing, Gerald Andriole, a urologic surgeon at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said during a conference call about the U.S. study, of which he is an author . . . but we kind of knew that already.

[See What 9 Types of Men Should Do About Prostate Cancer Screening.]

But finding prostate cancer early must be good, right?

Not necessarily. Finding and diagnosing any cancer early is helpful only if it actually affects the course of the disease—that is, if finding it early means you can save lives, says Robert Smith, director of cancer screening for the American Cancer Society. It's possible, however, for screening to catch slow-growing cancers that would never be lethal and yet miss aggressive tumors that spring up and spread in between screenings. In fact, there's pretty broad agreement that doctors treat some men for prostate tumors that never would have caused them problems, but it's not clear how many.

It's also unclear how to pinpoint which newly diagnosed cancers are potential killers and which are, as Andriole called them, "toothless lions." It's an important question to answer, not in the least because the potential side effects of prostate cancer treatment, including impotence and incontinence, are life-altering. It's even possible that treatment itself could shorten a patient's life by causing radiation damage or other delayed effects.

What about ovarian cancer screening? Wouldn't it be best to find that disease ASAP?

Everyone certainly hopes so. There's no current recommended screening regimen for the disease, but researchers are looking at some combination of a blood test called CA125, now used to track the progress of existing ovarian cancers, and a transvaginal ultrasound to visualize any tumors. This screening would be for postmenopausal women. As reported last week in Lancet Oncology, those tests may be promising. But again, while we know that cancers caught early tend to be more treatable, it's not clear that a screening program will help women live longer.

[See A Step Closer to Ovarian Cancer Screening?]

If we're not sure, isn't it safer to just tell all women to get a CA125 blood test?

PSA Screening

A very good article, altho I can appreciate the preference of the main subject of ovarian cancer by the female reporter. However, for s person who ran a PSA score for 10 years of about 4, and then saw it run up to over 4 in less than 6 months, and after a positive digital exam, got a biopsy with a Gleason score of 6. Chose the Johns Hopkins Hospital's Brady Urology Clinic's Radical Prostectomy with nerve sparing procedures, and had the prostate removed 10 years ago this Fall without any need for chemo or radiation. After surgery, PSA fell to level less than 0.01, and has remained at the same level for the past 9 years. With the advent of robotic surgery, my 6 inch abdominal incision, which caused me significant pain and lengthened recovery, has been reduced to a 2" parallel (no abdominal muscle cutting) incision, with recoveries of less than 2 weeks(as compared to my 12 week recovery). I agree with the commenter regarding do not dance with the cancer--get rid of it and live a reasonably active life!

Dan Henderson of MD @ Mar 18, 2009 22:29:23 PM

ovarian canceer

i have had ovarian cancer twice, just finished my 2nd chemo, i would have rather had a ca125 5 years eariler and know sooner rather than wait until it was to late. i would think a false positive is better than waiting and if more doctors would do that test then we would not have as many deaths as we do. i can remember breast cancer and mamograms years ago were thought unnecessay and now look how many lives it saves. we need to do something to help women now and not later. by the way most people know what the color pink means and the month of october, how about teal and the month of september??



Katherine Hobson: I'm glad you're doing well with treatment against this horrible disease. The problem with ovarian cancer is that it is quite rare -- far more rare than prostate or breast cancer. If we screened everyone, it would result in many, many women having unnecessary surgery (far more women would be cut open unnecessarily than would be saved by the test). It's possible that the net benefits of lives saved in terms of screening would not outweigh the negatives in terms of the bottom line: do people who are screened live longer than those who are not? Studies are still looking into this, so there's no answer yet. In terms of awareness, I think much more attention should be paid by docs and patients to these symptoms, which can signal early disease. If you have the symptoms listed in the article and they are new and persist for two or three weeks, talk to your doctor and specifically mention ovarian cancer. If he/she tells you that's not likely, ask why. Far too many women have early symptoms yet aren't taken seriously. Be your own advocate.

bj martin of MD @ Mar 18, 2009 20:31:05 PM

Ovarian screening

My mother died of ovarian cancer and I do believe that only a small number of ovarian cancers are hereditary. But we have recently been encouraged by a blood test for proteins that may be a great indicator. The cost estimate for the test that I have seen is $100-200 and the accuracy is 94%. We who have a reason for raised awareness should be asking our physicians about this test. I believe that the initial studies were done in

Europe. This is the first really promising indicator that I have seen in all the years that I have been following research.



Katherine Hobson: You may be referring to a test called OvaSure, which was briefly on the market last year until its manufacturer withdrew it after a warning by the FDA. The problem with it, and many tests, is that even though it have a very low false positive rate, ovarian cancer is rare enough so that most of the women who test positive will not actually have cancer. And unlike prostate cancer or breast cancer, the invasive procedure used to follow up is actual surgery, not just a biopsy, and that carries risks.

Contessabelle of SC @ Mar 18, 2009 20:06:26 PM

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