FRIDAY, Aug. 10 (HealthDay News) -- Though prostate cancer makes
the news a lot, much of the information seems conflicting or
inconclusive, leaving men with few absolute answers.
Which treatment is most effective? Which has the fewest side
effects? And who might benefit most from screening for prostate
cancer?
The dilemma posed by screening perhaps typifies the haze
surrounding prostate cancer issues.
"The problem with screening is we know that you have to screen a
lot of people and treat a lot of people to prevent one death,"
explained Dr. Ian Thompson, director of the Cancer Therapy and
Research Center at the University of Texas Health Science Center in
San Antonio. "Right now, you have to screen at least 1,000 men and
treat between 20 and 50 to prevent one death. That person
unequivocally benefits from screening, but at the same time, many
men were treated who didn't need it."
That's key because the risks of screening aren't trivial, he
said. The possibility of a false positive is significant, and that
finding then leads to a biopsy, which can cause excess bleeding or
infection. It's also possible to find a cancer that may have been
inconsequential, so screening can lead to overtreatment.
Complications from treatment also may include surgical
complications, urinary incontinence and sexual side effects.
"Now you have a man who has to take Viagra or who becomes
sexually inactive, or who has urinary incontinence or other
complications, and those are significant," Thompson said. "And,
while those complications may seem small compared to saving a life,
there are far more people affected by complications than people
saved."
Ruth Etzioni, a biostatistician and researcher at the Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, agreed.
"The reason why people can't come to an agreement about
screening [for prostate cancer] is that it's not all good," Etzioni
said. "It's costly and it can harm many more men than it's
saved."
"Older men won't benefit from prostate cancer screening,"
Etzioni said. "They're much more likely to die of another cause.
There really is a consensus that older men shouldn't be screened.
But, there are still doctors performing the test in older men or
older patients who are asking for it."
For younger men, there's no consensus on what to do, said both
Thompson and Etzioni.
The latest recommendation from the U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force is that there's not enough credible information available to
recommend screening for prostate cancer with the prostate-specific
antigen (PSA) test for any man, regardless of age.
Not everyone agrees with that recommendation, however. The
American Society of Clinical Oncology advises men with a life
expectancy of more than 10 years to talk with their doctors about
their own individual risks and benefits from a PSA screening test.
For men with a life expectancy of less than 10 years, the
organization believes that the risks of the PSA test probably
outweigh its benefits.
Men with a higher risk for prostate cancer may benefit from
screening with the PSA test, according to Thompson. One factor that
increases risk is having first-degree relatives -- father, brother,
son -- with prostate cancer. The more relatives with the disease,
the greater a man's risk. The other significant risk factor is
race. Blacks have double the risk for prostate cancer, compared
with whites, Thompson said.
However, most people who develop prostate cancer have no risk
factors at all, he said.
Etzioni said it's important to keep the odds of dying from
prostate cancer in context.
"The chance that you'll die of prostate cancer is rare," she
said. "The chance that something else will kill you is much
higher." Men's health would be better served, she said, if they
spent more time exercising and eating healthy.
Thompson said he wished men would do at least the same amount of
due diligence in deciding whether to get a prostate cancer
screening as they do when they're going to buy a major appliance or
a car.
"The take-home message is what really ought to happen is that
people should become educated," he said.
That advice also holds true when men with prostate cancer have
to choose which treatment is best for them, he said. Common options
include active surveillance, surgery, radiation and hormone
therapy.
When it comes to choosing an individual treatment, both Thompson
and Etzioni said that most of the common treatments appear to be
similarly effective so the decision may come down to the potential
side effects of each treatment.
"There are important side effects from treatment that can affect
quality of life, and they're not infrequent," Etzioni said.
Often, though, that decision "may be more of a gut feeling than
an intellectual decision," Thompson said.
For men with slow-growing cancer, both experts said that active
surveillance -- sometimes called watchful waiting -- is often a
reasonable alternative to other treatments. The condition is
monitored closely but not treated unless it progresses.
Men with more aggressive cancers may need to combine treatments
to get the best results, Thompson said. Those who choose radiation
to treat such cancer, he said, usually have better outcomes when
they also have hormone therapy. For those who choose surgery for an
aggressive cancer, results will probably be better if radiation is
added to the treatment, he noted.
More information
The American Urological Association Foundation has more on
prostate cancer.
A companion article looks at how one man dealt with
treatment options.