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Journal ArticleDOI

Screening for Prostate Cancer: The Roles of Science, Policy, and Opinion in Determining What is Best for Patients

Steven H. Woolf, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1999 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 1, pp 207-221
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TLDR
Individual patients who could benefit from screening should be informed about the potential benefits and harms and invited to make a personal choice based on their priorities and concerns.
Abstract
Controversy over screening for prostate cancer involves both scientific and policy considerations. The principal scientific questions are whether tumors detected by screening are clinically significant, whether screening generates too many false-positive results, and whether early detection lowers morbidity or mortality. Both screening and treatment of prostate cancer can be harmful, making the tradeoff between benefits and risks especially relevant. Studies suggest that this judgment is highly personal, depending on the relative importance that individuals assign to potential outcomes. Opinions and policy considerations also influence views about the appropriateness of screening. Chief among these are personal beliefs about benefits and harms, medicolegal concerns, patient expectations, resource constraints, and opportunity costs. Appropriate policy must discriminate between what is best for populations and for individual patients. The lack of evidence of benefit and the potential harms argue against a societal policy of routine screening. Individual patients who could benefit from screening should be informed about the potential benefits and harms and invited to make a personal choice based on their priorities and concerns.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Educating African American Men about the Prostate Cancer Screening Dilemma: A Randomized Intervention

TL;DR: This study represents one of the first randomized intervention trials specifically designed to address AA men's informed decision making about prostate cancer screening and developed and evaluated culturally sensitive, balanced, and disseminable materials that improved knowledge and reduced decisional conflict about prostatecancer screening among AA men.
Journal Article

The Economic Impact of False-Positive Cancer Screens

TL;DR: The results here indicate that false- positive results among some available cancer screening tests are relatively common, that patients incurring a false-positive screen tend to receive follow-up testing, and that such follow- up is not without associated medical costs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimization of Prostate Biopsy Referral Decisions

TL;DR: A nonstationary partially observable Markov decision process (POMDP) for prostate biopsy referral decisions that demonstrates a nondecreasing belief threshold in age, and provides sufficient conditions under which PSA screening should be discontinued for older patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Knowledge of the limitations associated with prostate cancer screening among low-income men.

TL;DR: This correlational pilot study measured limitations of prostate cancer screening, using a revised Knowledge of Prostate Cancer Questionnaire, and found that married men, low-income men, and Caucasian men had significantly lower Total Knowledge Scores than unmarried, higher income, and African American men.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is screening for abdominal aortic aneurysm bad for your health and well‐being?

TL;DR: Whether screening for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) causes health‐related quality of life to change in men or their partners is investigated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reducing Mortality from Colorectal Cancer by Screening for Fecal Occult Blood

TL;DR: Cutting mortality in the annually screened group was accompanied by improved survival in those with colorectal cancer and a shift to detection at an earlier stage of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer statistics, 1998

TL;DR: The Surveillance Research Program of the American Cancer Society's Department of Epidemiology and Surveillance reports its 32nd annual compilation of cancer incidence, mortality, and survival data for the United States and around the world.
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A case-control study of screening sigmoidoscopy and mortality from colorectal cancer.

TL;DR: Screening by sigmoidoscopy can reduce mortality from cancer of the rectum and distal colon and a screening once every 10 years may be nearly as efficacious as more frequent screening.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of digital rectal examination and serum prostate specific antigen in the early detection of prostate cancer: results of a multicenter clinical trial of 6,630 men.

TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective clinical trial at 6 university centers of 6,630 male volunteers 50 years old or older who underwent PSA determination (Hybritech Tandom-E or Tandem-R assays) and digital rectal examination was conducted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Serum prostate-specific antigen in a community-based population of healthy men. Establishment of age-specific reference ranges.

TL;DR: The influence of patient age and prostatic size on the serum PSA concentration was assessed in order to use PSA more appropriately to detect clinically significant prostate cancer at an early, potentially curable stage.
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