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Examining The Need For
Prostate Cancer Treatments
Most men diagnosed with low-grade prostate cancer may not need
radical treatments such as surgery or radiotherapy, which can
have serious side effects, British researchers said.
A modeling study by scientists at the Institute of Cancer Research
in England has shown that men whose cancer is detected early with
a screening test are unlikely to die from the illness.
So treatments such as surgery to remove the prostate gland or
radiotherapy which can cause incontinence and impotence will probably
not improve their survival.
"Most men with prostate cancer detected by PSA screening will
live out their natural span without the disease causing them any
ill effects," said Dr Chris Parker whose findings are reported
in the British Journal of Cancer.
"The decision whether to have radical treatment can be tremendously
difficult for the patients," he added.
The modeling study predicted that the chance a man aged 55-59
with a low grade cancer dying of the disease within 15 years,
even without treatment, is about one in a 100.
But the research suggests that men with high-grade advanced cancer
would benefit from treatments such as surgery or radiotherapy.
The PSA test measures levels of a protein called prostate-specific
antigen, which is produced by the prostate gland, in the blood.
It has enabled doctors to detect the cancer much earlier than
they previously could.
Parker and his team are testing a new prostate cancer management
technique called Active Surveillance which aims to target treatment
only to men who need it.
"Patients are closely monitored and the choice between radical
treatment and continued observation is based on evidence of disease
progressions," he explained.
Prostate is one of the most common cancers in men. Each year
543,000 new cases are reported worldwide. The disease kills 200,000
mostly older men in developed countries, according to the International
Agency for Research on Cancer.
Reference
Source 89
May
29, 2006
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