Screening for prostate cancer--the controversy that refuses to die.

In the United States, most men over the age of 50 years have had a prostate-specific–antigen (PSA) test,1 despite the absence of evidence from large, randomized trials of a net benefit. Moreover, about 95% of male urologists and 78% of primary care physicians who are 50 years of age or older report that they have had a PSA test themselves,2 a finding that suggests they are practicing what they preach. And indeed, U.S. death rates from prostate cancer have fallen about 4% per year since 1992, five years after the introduction of PSA testing.3 Perhaps the answer to the PSA . . .

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[10]  M. Barry,et al.  Why are a high overdiagnosis probability and a long lead time for prostate cancer screening so important? , 2009, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[11]  D. Saslow,et al.  Cancer Screening in the United States, 2010: A Review of Current American Cancer Society Guidelines and Issues in Cancer Screening , 2010, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[12]  T. Wilt,et al.  The Prostate cancer Intervention Versus Observation Trial:VA/NCI/AHRQ Cooperative Studies Program #407 (PIVOT): design and baseline results of a randomized controlled trial comparing radical prostatectomy to watchful waiting for men with clinically localized prostate cancer. , 2009, Contemporary clinical trials.