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Prostate
Specific Antigen Testing may be unnecessary
for some Older Men
Newswise — Certain men age 75 to 80 are
unlikely to benefit from routine prostate
specific antigen (PSA) testing, according to
a Johns Hopkins study published in the April
2009 issue of The Journal of Urology.
The researchers found that men in this age
group with PSA levels less than 3 nanograms
per milliliter are unlikely to die of or
experience aggressive prostate cancer during
their remaining life, suggesting that the
use of PSA testing in many older men may no
longer be needed.
The study, led by researchers from the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine and
the National Institute on Aging’s Baltimore
Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA), reviewed
data from 849 men (122 with and 727 without
prostate cancer) who were participating in
the BLSA and who had undergone regular PSA
testing.
Results showed that among men who were over
75 with PSA levels less than 3 nanograms per
milliliter, none died of prostate cancer and
only one developed high-risk prostate
cancer. In contrast, men of all ages with a
PSA level of 3 nanograms per milliliter or
greater had a continually rising probability
of dying from prostate cancer.
If confirmed by future studies, these
results may help determine more specific
guidelines for when PSA -based screening
might be safely discontinued, according to
lead investigator Edward Schaeffer, M.D., an
assistant professor of urology at Johns
Hopkins.
While PSA screening remains a useful tool
for helping detect early stages of prostate
cancer and is credited with decreasing
prostate cancer mortality, discontinuing
unneeded PSA testing could significantly
reduce the costs of screening and also
potentially reduce morbidity resulting from
additional tests or treatments.
“We need to identify where we should best
focus our health care dollars by
concentrating on patients who can actually
benefit from PSA testing,” Schaeffer says.
“These findings give a very strong
suggestion of when we can start to counsel
patients on when to stop testing.”
Other Johns Hopkins researchers who
participated in this study include H.
Ballentine Carter, M.D., Anna Kettermann,
M.A., Stacy Loeb, M.D., Luigi Ferrucci,
M.D., Ph.D., Patricia Landis, B.S., Bruce J.
Trock, Ph.D., and E. Jeffrey Metter, M.D.
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