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Screening and prostate cancer . Rosalie Schultz CARPA August 2011. Screening. What is disease screening?. High risk. Low risk. Benefits from disease screening. Early diagnosis so the disease can be treated more effectively More people cured Lives saved. Harms from disease screening.
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Screening and prostate cancer Rosalie Schultz CARPA August 2011
What is disease screening? High risk Low risk
Benefits from disease screening • Early diagnosis so the disease can be treated more effectively • More people cured • Lives saved
Harms from disease screening • Inconvenience • Anxiety • Wrong test results • Unnecessary treatment • False reassurance
Disease screening • Disease must have early stage • Suitable test – finds people at risk • Effective treatment for people with disease • Screening program must reduce sickness and death • Benefits must be greater than harms, physical and psychological • Social and ethical issues • Costs should be less than benefits
Screening for cancer in Australia Cervical cancer Breast cancer Bowel cancer
Cervical cancer screening • All women age 18 to 70 who have ever had sex • 2nd yearly pap smear tests • Detects abnormal cells in cervix (“opening of the baby bag”) • Abnormalities may resolve without treatment • Some abnormalities later become cancer - 10 years • Minor operation can remove abnormalities, prevent cancer • About 65% of Australian women have pap smears
Breast cancer screening • Women aged 50 to 69 • Mammography – special x-ray of the breasts • Detects abnormalities that cannot be felt • Small operation can find out if abnormality is cancer • Many cancers detected by screening would never cause sickness – 25-30% • About 10 women are treated for every one who benefits • About 55% of women have mammography
Bowel cancer screening – 2006-2008 • 50, 55 and 65 year-olds invited to send in specimen (1 000 000 Australians) • 39% had test • 7.5% positive = 29 000 • 5.2% had cancer = 1500 • 41% no cancer or adenoma = 12 000 • Full results awaited
Prostate cancer in NT Per 100 000 Territorians, Aged standardised, 1991-2005
Prostate cancer screening? • Slow growing disease • Tests: • PSA (prostate specific antigen) blood test • Digital rectal examination – may find extra cases • Treatment – surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy • 40% impotence • 3% incontinence • Number who would benefit 0.1% • Autopsies show prostate cancer in 10-20% of 50 year old men; 40-50% of 70 year old men
Prostate cancer screening • Many false positive results • Unpleasant follow-up diagnostic procedures • Aggressive treatments • Disease may never have symptoms • Benefit to few and costs to many • Harmful effects greater than health gain from detecting true cases of prostate cancer • No official screening program • 50% of Australian men have been tested
Prostate cancer screening • Prostate cancer screening decreases prostate cancer mortality • Large increase in people diagnosed and treated (overtreatment). • Severe side-effects of treatment • Many men have symptoms from surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy • Few men live longer or better • Balance is health loss with increased costs
Live long enough to die from prostate cancer Thank you!