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CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, Vol 45, Issue 3 134-147, Copyright © 1995 by American Cancer Society
K. M. Slawin, M. Ohori, O. Dillioglugil and P. T. Scardino
Several common misconceptions have fueled the debate over the early
detection and treatment of prostate cancer. While prostate cancer is often
described as a common cancer that older men die with rather than of, the
reality is that the incidence, mortality, and mean age and stage at
diagnosis of prostate cancer are very similar to those of breast cancer,
which is rarely the subject of similar concerns. Many studies have
confirmed that given enough time, all clinically detected prostate cancers
will inexorably progress locally and eventually metastasize to regional
lymph nodes as well as to distant sites. The relatively slow doubling time
compared to that of other cancers and the wide spectrum of biologic
activity of prostate cancer have made retrospective studies reporting the
long-term survival of conservatively treated patients highly suspect due to
selection bias and inadequate follow-up. While it is accepted that a large
number of men harbor clinically insignificant cancers in their prostate
glands, these estimates have been based on careful pathologic
step-sectioning studies of prostates obtained either at autopsy or after
cystoprostatectomy for bladder cancer. Several studies have now
demonstrated that currently available diagnostic modalities for detecting
prostate cancer, DRE, PSA, and TRUS, are not able to detect a significant
proportion of small, clinically unimportant cancers. Rather, studies have
shown that while the traditional DRE has been largely unsuccessful in
detecting prostate cancers at a sufficiently early stage for effective
treatment with either radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy, a
combination of the DRE and PSA followed by TRUS and ultrasound-guided
biopsy in those with abnormal results can detect an increased proportion of
clinically significant prostate cancers while they are still confined to
the prostate gland and thus more likely to be eradicated by treatment.
Several randomized trials are now under way in this country and in Europe
that may settle many of these issues over the next decade. However,
currently available data suggest that prostate cancer screening holds the
promise of decreasing the considerable morbidity and mortality caused by
this disease.
ARTICLES
Screening for prostate cancer: an analysis of the early experience
Scott Department of Urology, Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, USA.
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R. C. Susil, A. Krieger, J. A. Derbyshire, A. Tanacs, L. L. Whitcomb, G. Fichtinger, and E. Atalar System for MR Image-guided Prostate Interventions: Canine Study Radiology, September 1, 2003; 228(3): 886 - 894. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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