Screening Works: Prostate Cancer
Death Rate Drops
to Lowest Mark Ever
Rate for African American men lowest in 29 years
Prostate cancer death rates dropped 32.5 percent in 10
years, according to new reports, possibly as a result of a dramatic increase in
early detection. The mortality rate for African American men is the lowest since
1977, but it is still 2.36 times the rate for Caucasian men.
If the disease is caught early, nearly 100 percent of men are still alive
five years after diagnosis, but if the cancer has already spread to a distant
location, the five-year survival rate is only 34 percent. Since 1993, the
percentage of men with distant prostate cancer at the time of diagnosis has
dropped by 40 percent.
The PSA test, introduced in the mid 80’s, spurred an increase in prostate
cancer diagnoses peaking at around 1992. The rapid increase in early detection
and subsequent drop in the death rate since 1993 could be attributed to
widespread use of the PSA test, adding to the growing body of evidence the PSA
test saves lives.
“More lives are being saved every day, through advances in treatment and
early detection,” said National Prostate Cancer Coalition CEO Richard N. Atkins,
M.D. “It’s important to get active, and tell elected officials to spend more
funds on prostate cancer research. Together, we can drop the mortality rate by
another 32 percent in a few years.”
The NPCC using results from the SEER Database reported a reduction of
32.5% in the mortality rate. This reduction is directly related to
early detection and treatment by the use of PSA testing. How will
anti-screening forces explain such reduction while supporting the
notion that PSA is not a useful marker?
Source: NPCC Website:
http://www.fightprostatecancer.org/site/PageServer?pagename=homepage
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