Prostate cancer screening- where it stands now

(this post has been updated 11/17/2015)

Prostate cancer is to men what breast cancer is to women in the United States-

  • The number 1 diagnosed cancer in men
  • The number 2 cause of cancer-related death in men

Top 10 cancers in the U.S.

So, naturally we would like to be able to diagnose it at a stage where the chance for a cure is greatest.

A screening test is a test that is done on a healthy person to detect a disease that is not causing symptoms. 

For breast cancer, that is a mammogram. For prostate cancer, it is a fairly simple blood test to measure a chemical called Prostate-specific antigen, or PSA

The blood level of PSA may be high or normal in the presence of cancer. If high, it will decline with treatment.
The blood level of PSA may be high or normal in the presence of cancer. If high, it will decline with treatment.

 PSA is a protein produced only by the prostate gland; levels in the blood can be elevated by any disease of the prostate, not just cancer. And, in some cases, it can be normal, even in the presence of cancer.

anatomy of the prostate gland
The prostate gland sits just under the bladder in the pelvic area.

Despite the bleak sounding statistics, we know that most prostate cancers grow so slowly that they will never cause death. And, for cases that are discovered and treated, sometimes the treatment can cause complications worse than would have occurred from the cancer.

So, multiple organizations including the American Cancer Society, and the American Urological Association, have issued guidelines for screening. To simplify, I am listing a composite of the recommendations from them and others, since they are all quite similar.

  • Men under 50 years old- screening not recommended (unless high risk, see below)
  • Men from age 50 to 70 years old should discuss the benefit versus risk with their physician, and make a decision together
  • Black men are at higher risk so should discuss screening with their physician at age 45 years.
  • Men whose father or brother had prostate cancer prior to age 65 years, should begin discussions at age 45 years.
  • Men age 70 and older do not need screening, because they will unlikely die from prostate cancer.
  • Finally, any man whose health status suggests a life expectancy of less than 10-15 years does benefit from  screening.

The goal for cancer screening, other than merely finding a cancer, is to

  • increase a person’s chance for cure and survival.
  • minimize complications of the screening and treatment

In the case of prostate cancer, screening does not seem to accomplish this. But these, like other screening guidelines, are based on current evidence, so must be reviewed regularly and changed based on new information.

Here are the guidelines as published for patients in the Journal of the AMA with a link to a podcast discussion.

This Guide to Surviving Prostate Cancer 

by Dr. Patrick Walsh

Guide to Surviving Prostate Cancer
This represents an affiliate link for this book.

“covers every aspect of prostate cancer, from potential causes including diet to tests for diagnosis, curative treatment, and innovative means of controlling advanced stages of cancer.”

Honoring Our Veterans 

Veterans Day on November 11 honors those who served in the U.S. armed forces. The Veterans Administration supports veterans through health care, education, and research. Personal stories highlight the ongoing impact of veterans, including therapeutic relationships with pets and reflections from veterans of past conflicts, emphasizing resilience and community connection.

updated November 4, 2024

In the United States we reserve November 11, the date of the Armistice of World War I, as Veterans Day, to remember and honor all who do or have served in our armed forces.

The Veterans Administration provides benefits to veterans including health care. The VA Health Care System, or VHA,  one of the largest in the world, not only cares for veterans’ health, but also  provides medical education and medical research.

If you have ever received care from a physician who trained in the United States, that doctor likely learned from a veteran in a VHA facility. So our veterans continue to serve even after they leave military service. 

Welcome home heroes sign on a VA clinic
a Veterans Administration clinic

Here are several stories about veterans. Enjoy them, and thank the veterans you know this week.

disabled veteran patch

One Dog’s Powerful Healing Effects on Two Wounded Veterans

I believe your heart will be touched by this  story about the special relationship between  a wounded veteran and his therapy dog. Mine certainly was.

“It’s been quite a journey for U.S. Army veteran Justin Lansford and his canine companion, Gabe.

In 2012, Lansford lost his left leg in an IED explosion in Afghanistan.”

My husband served in the Army and was deployed to Vietnam in the 1970s. Here is his story –

From bullets to blessings-one man’s journey to recovery from war

“I didn’t want to ever go to Vietnam again when I came home in 1972 after a one-year tour of duty with the United States Army. I was stationed with the Americal Division, 3/18 Field Artillery Battalion near Tra Bong, a major village located about 25 miles west of Chu Lai, the headquarters of the Americal Division, on “China Beach” at the South China Sea.”

man next to concrete bunker at China Beach
Raymond visiting an old war bunker on China Beach

 

A veteran dishes out love– personal reflections from a Vietnam veteran

“The people around us are starving for love and we need to unlock our pantry and see to it that everybody gets a belly full.”

clowns entertain Vietnamese people
A veteran and his wife clown for people at a humanitarian outreach in Vietnam.
two soldiers statue
memorial statue at Canon City, Colorado-photo by Dr Aletha 

exploring the HEART of health

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