Dr. Mark Scholz Comments on Recently Published Studies of the Effectiveness of PSA Screening. Re: Letter to the Editor Regarding a Wall Street Journal Article titled:
Two Big Studies Tackle Debate on Prostate Test published on Thursday March 19, 2009
The Wall Street Journal recently published a letter to the editor under the heading, “Lifestyle Is Fine, but Cancer Needs Effective Treatment.” The physician writing the letter vilified the idea of using anything but surgery to treat his prostate cancer. Unfortunately, his uninformed convictions are prevalent throughout the medical community. Now definitive, well-performed studies unequivocally prove that overtreatment is the norm (New England Journal of Medicine 2009;360:1310-9 and 1320-8) .
As has been the case for years, the a priori assumption that “all cancer needs treatment” has confused the expert commentators who are interpreting these crystal-clear study results as being part of an ongoing unresolved controversy about PSA testing. The reality is that huge amounts of precious research dollars are being spent to answer a foolish question. Whether or not to do PSA testing is not the issue. The issue is deciding what to do with the information the PSA provides.
Right now the nation is in the grip of 8-billion dollar industry hell-bent on administering treatment to every kind of prostate cancer whether it is life-threatening or not. The solution to the problem of over-treating prostate cancer is not less PSA testing. The solution is educating physicians to forgo recommending immediate surgery or radiation to every last man who gets a diagnosis of prostate cancer.
Newly-diagnosed patients need to research all their options before agreeing to irreversible radical treatment. PSA testing (in conjunction with other means) has a useful role in determining which men harbor the more aggressive types of prostate cancer. Only with a “go slow” approach, ongoing monitoring known as Active Surveillance, can we distinguish men with aggressive disease who need treatment from men with indolent disease who don’t need treatment.
Mark Scholz, M.D.
Prostate Cancer Research Institute
Los Angeles, California
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Dick. Can you see this?
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