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Does the PSA test for prostate cancer save lives? New data reverse gold-standard findings

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Why This Matters

The new Cochrane review suggests that PSA testing may indeed reduce prostate cancer mortality, marking a significant shift from previous conclusions. This could influence global screening policies and impact early detection strategies, potentially saving lives without increasing unnecessary treatments. For consumers, it highlights the evolving understanding of prostate cancer screening's benefits and risks.

Key Takeaways

Prostate cancer (cells, artificially coloured) affected 1.5 million people worldwide in 2022.Credit: Dr Gopal Murti/Science Photo Library

Does prostate-cancer screening with the common ‘PSA’ blood test save lives? The Cochrane, an influential group renowned for its gold-standard medical reviews, has previously addressed that question twice, and twice the answer was ‘no.’

Now, data from nearly 800,000 people has prompted a U-turn. A Cochrane review published today1 suggests that testing for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) “likely reduces the risk of dying” from prostate cancer – and without increasing the likelihood of negative side effects caused by prostate biopsies or prostate cancer treatment.

Early-onset cancer fuels calls for wider screening — but at what cost?

The number of lives saved is small, the group found, but the latest finding still marks a reversal of Cochrane reviews published in 20062 and 20133. The authors of the most recent version say that that their findings were driven in part by data from two new trials4,5 encompassing more than 250,000 people and from extra years of data from four older trials.

The report comes as several policy bodies around the world are reviewing guidelines for medics on the use of PSA testing.

“This finding is a milestone. I think it will make a difference for a lot of policy makers,” says Philipp Dahm, a urologist at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and corresponding author of the review.

Common cancer

In the 1980s, scientists discovered that a blood test for PSA, a protein produced by the prostate, could detect prostate cancer. Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancers in men, affecting 1.5 million worldwide in 2022. Most men diagnosed with prostate cancer do not die from the disease. (This article uses the word “men” to reflect wording in cited studies and reports.)

The introduction of a blood test made screening for prostate cancer more common, and the number of recorded cases skyrocketed. But the test can flag people with very slow-growing tumours or those with prostates that are enlarged but cancer-free. Such results raise the possibility that people who test positive but do not have life-threatening cancer will undergo invasive biopsies and treatment, leaving some scientists uncertain about the wider benefits of testing.

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