PSA Testing "Yes" or "No"
#26
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I think the problem here is more with the patient than with the doctor. I was in the medical profession for 25 years and I can tell you that many patients are too quick to listen to what the doctor tells them and do no research or bother to get a second (or more) opinion. There are too many urologist that are quick to start cancer treatments "just in case" and too many patients that are not informed enough to stop them until they know all the facts. I must agree that there are urologist that recommend brachytherapy with a very low Gleason score just to be on the safe side and avoid litigation if they don't suggest it and something happens, but the patient has his responsibility to be informed and make the final decision. Many men have an "out of mind" approach to prostate cancer. If they don't think about it or if they don't know what their PSA and/or PSA Velocity is, they won't get prostate cancer. I think that many of us who have been there and done that have a much different opinion to this pre-screening findings which more often than none leans toward those that do the financing.
What follows the bolded sentence seems to say patients get lousy advice from their doctors so they need to figure out what it all means for themselves. So why not let us get test kits and mail the results back? We can then go on the Internet and figure out our own response. I admit that is a bit of a snarky response but I think your description leads to the conclusion that the medical establishment as a whole is more the culprit than the patients. If we rely on laymen (who are as likely to believe in crystals as science) to figure this stuff out we are in deep trouble. For those of us who are willing to get more involved I guess the answer is something along the lines of "Take the test but if the results may call for action get yourself educated and get a few opinions. If all the opinions call for treatment get treatment. If the opinions are mixed, do more self education and proceed slowly." If that is the answer I guess I can live with it. But I don't like paying so much for it.
#27
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I might consider avoiding early PSA screening when the ladies decide to avoid early breast cancer screening.
#28
Bingo
Next step is the biopsy. Trust me on this, you don't want one of those if you don't have to have one. I went that route, following my Doc's advice. Even the results from that gave us no help as to what to do next. Worse yet, the medical problems that developed as a result of that biopsy, for months after, were not fun.
I'm convinced that serious bicycling can lead to increased PSA levels......That is not the same as cancer.
Doc said lets do another biopsy in a year......I said no thanks.
#29
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A classic case of difffering objectives combined with trying to draw conclusions for the specific from the general. The study was looking at the benefit/risk factors for the general population and trying to make recommendations on the cost/benefit factors for the general population. That is far different than examining a single afffected individual. Grossly oversimplified, their recommendations make economic sense to the population as a whole. But, I'm not the population as a whole. I am the population of one, me.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
#30
I think the problem here is more with the patient than with the doctor. I was in the medical profession for 25 years and I can tell you that many patients are too quick to listen to what the doctor tells them and do no research or bother to get a second (or more) opinion. There are too many urologist that are quick to start cancer treatments "just in case" and too many patients that are not informed enough to stop them until they know all the facts. I must agree that there are urologist that recommend brachytherapy with a very low Gleason score just to be on the safe side and avoid litigation if they don't suggest it and something happens, but the patient has his responsibility to be informed and make the final decision. Many men have an "out of mind" approach to prostate cancer. If they don't think about it or if they don't know what their PSA and/or PSA Velocity is, they won't get prostate cancer. I think that many of us who have been there and done that have a much different opinion to this pre-screening findings which more often than none leans toward those that do the financing.
Treatments will be recommended as business builders or fear of litigation but not because the patient has cancer. Stopping the PSA test will ensure that more men do get undetected cancer that cost way more money to treat while not giving the patient info to litigate with.
Like it of not doctors can no longer afford to be kindly caretakers of old...........
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Originally Posted by krazygluon
Steel: nearly a thousand years of metallurgical development
Aluminum: barely a hundred, which one would you rather have under your butt at 30mph?
My preferred bicycle brand is.......WORKSMAN CYCLES
I dislike clipless pedals on any city bike since I feel they are unsafe.
Originally Posted by krazygluon
Steel: nearly a thousand years of metallurgical development
Aluminum: barely a hundred, which one would you rather have under your butt at 30mph?
Last edited by Nightshade; 10-09-11 at 10:58 AM.
#32
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Dennis,
Are you taking Casodex and getting the Zoladex injections? That was my treatment because of my chronic leukemia (CML). My oncologist/hematologist did not want to take me off of my leukemia meds for any type of surgery so my only choice at the time was the radiation/hormone treatment. I wish they would have had the Cyberknife treatment when I was diagnosed. It would have been another option for me that I didn't have at the time.
Are you taking Casodex and getting the Zoladex injections? That was my treatment because of my chronic leukemia (CML). My oncologist/hematologist did not want to take me off of my leukemia meds for any type of surgery so my only choice at the time was the radiation/hormone treatment. I wish they would have had the Cyberknife treatment when I was diagnosed. It would have been another option for me that I didn't have at the time.
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#33
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#34
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Originally Posted by donheff
For those of us who are willing to get more involved I guess the answer is something along the lines of "Take the test but if the results may call for action get yourself educated and get a few opinions. If all the opinions call for treatment get treatment. If the opinions are mixed, do more self education and proceed slowly." If that is the answer I guess I can live with it. But I don't like paying so much for it.
When I was told that I may have leukemia by my primary care physician, I read about the different types of leukemia for almost a week-and-a-half, learning everything I could possibly find out about the disorder. When I met my hematologist for the first time, I was prepared and able to understand everything he was going to throw at me. I didn't just sit there and say, "OK! What do we do now?", and leave it to him to decide what was going to happen to me. The choices I made came from being well informed and fully understanding of what I possibly had. I didn't get a second opinion for the leukemia since a bone marrow biopsy was the only way to know for sure if I had this particular type of leukemia and any other hematologist would have ordered it as well. I did, however, seek more than one urologist opinion when the possibility of prostate cancer was brought up, even though my PSA Velocity pointed in that direction.
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#35
The problem is that way too many patients don't get involved and is what I meant by "the problem is more the patient than the doctor." With the information available to us today, there is no reason for someone being diagnosed with any type of disease to not understand it and not have a say as to what is going to happen to them. .
#36
A classic case of difffering objectives combined with trying to draw conclusions for the specific from the general. The study was looking at the benefit/risk factors for the general population and trying to make recommendations on the cost/benefit factors for the general population. That is far different than examining a single afffected individual. Grossly oversimplified, their recommendations make economic sense to the population as a whole. But, I'm not the population as a whole. I am the population of one, me.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
#37
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A classic case of difffering objectives combined with trying to draw conclusions for the specific from the general. The study was looking at the benefit/risk factors for the general population and trying to make recommendations on the cost/benefit factors for the general population. That is far different than examining a single afffected individual. Grossly oversimplified, their recommendations make economic sense to the population as a whole. But, I'm not the population as a whole. I am the population of one, me.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
This is not the only place where what makes sense from a statistical sense for the entire population makes no sense to individuals as long as we can afford to treat individuals as individuals and not just as members of the collective whole.
#38
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He read the study properly. The study shows that the testing isn't worth the dollars, using whatever scale they use. But, economics aside, is the savings worth it? What does the test cost when it's part of a panel the doc is doing anyhow? As far as I'm concerned, my specific dollars will be used to pay for my specific test - if an economist says I can do more with that money elsewhere, well, it's none of his business. I will continue to spend my money on the test, thank you.
#39
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On the other hand unless a specific test is 100% accurate the best it can do for an individual is give probability. Where the likely individual falls on the probability line is a matter of judgement in light of other known factors.
It is just a matter of knowing the purpose of the study and the associated metrics. This study and associated test were for herd resource allocation, not individual benefit.
#40
Not at all. From a herd viewpoint it is very useful to be able to identify risk and assess its' probability and cost. It is also useful to know just how accurate the measuring stick is for that risk. Also, resource allocation decisions by insurance companies, health authorities and governments are aided by population wide studies.
On the other hand unless a specific test is 100% accurate the best it can do for an individual is give probability. Where the likely individual falls on the probability line is a matter of judgement in light of other known factors.
It is just a matter of knowing the purpose of the study and the associated metrics. This study and associated test were for herd resource allocation, not individual benefit.
On the other hand unless a specific test is 100% accurate the best it can do for an individual is give probability. Where the likely individual falls on the probability line is a matter of judgement in light of other known factors.
It is just a matter of knowing the purpose of the study and the associated metrics. This study and associated test were for herd resource allocation, not individual benefit.
Agree. And, we are getting just a bit closer to "Death by Committee" IMHO.
#41
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After all this back and forth about what the "study" said I read the linked article (It isn't a study, it is a recommendation based on a lot of studies). What it says (or at least what I think it says) can be distilled to this. Most men who get a positive PSA test will go on to get a biopsy. But about 80% of those results are false positives so those guys get the negatives of a biopsy for naught. Of those whose biopsies show a cancer almost all of them will have treatment even though though most of the cancers would progress slowly and never have resulted in clinical symptoms before death from other causes. The aggressive or otherwise dangerous cancers will be detected later by clinical symptoms and would then be treated anyway. So the net result of screen is a lot of angst and earlier treatment of some cancers. It is those few guys who will get the earlier treatment of dangerous tumors that we are concerned with and why some of us have supported getting the screen. BUT, the statistics show that the benefits are minimal or none. The studies found NO advantages from screening for men over 70. And the studies showed marginal if any benefits for men 59-70. From the recommendation: "The evidence is convincing that for men aged 70 years and older, screening has no mortality benefit. For men aged 50 to 69 years, the evidence is convincing that the reduction in prostate cancer mortality 10 years after screening is small to none." If all of this is accurate then most (maybe not all) of the guys who got early treatment due to the test/biopsy would have gotten treatment later due to clinical syptoms and would end up with a similar result. The recommendation is to rely on clinical symptoms, not PSA screening to counsel a biopsy and subsequent treatment if a cancer is found. They are saying YOU are better off waiting for symptoms before getting a biopsy. This is not a cost tradeoff it is a straight benefit to you recommendation. Here is another quote:
I plan to talk to my primary care physician about this at my next physical. My inclination would be to skip the PSA screen and rely on clinical symptoms. But I would be open to a rational discussion about why I might be wrong.
"The common perception that PSA-based early detection of prostate cancer prolongs lives is not supported by the scientific evidence. The findings of the two largest trials highlight the uncertainty that remains about the precise effect that screening may have, and demonstrate that if any benefit does exist, it is very small after 10 years. The European trial found a statistically insignificant 0.06% absolute reduction in prostate cancer deaths for men aged 50 to 74 years, while the U.S. trial found a statistically insignificant 0.03% absolute increase in prostate cancer deaths (6, 7). A meta-analysis of all published trials found no statistically significant reduction in prostate cancer deaths (10). At the same time, overdiagnosis and overtreatment of prostatic tumors that will not progress to cause illness or death are frequent consequences of PSA-based screening. Although about 90% of men are currently treated for PSA-detected prostate cancer in the United States—usually with surgery or radiotherapy—the vast majority of men who are treated do not have prostate cancer death prevented or lives extended from that treatment, but are subjected to significant harms."
From a money perspective it seems like the test simply pumps money into the medical system with no evidence that the money makes a difference. Since the advent of testing a million men have had surgeries/radiation who would not have had them otherwise: "From 1986 through 2005, PSA-based screening likely resulted in approximately 1 million additional U.S. men being treated with surgery, radiation therapy, or both compared with before the test was introduced."I plan to talk to my primary care physician about this at my next physical. My inclination would be to skip the PSA screen and rely on clinical symptoms. But I would be open to a rational discussion about why I might be wrong.
Last edited by donheff; 10-09-11 at 06:01 PM.
#42
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You're overlooking that it's not just about money or allocation of healthcare resources. Quality of life factors into this issue: Some of the men who receive aggressive treatment become impotent or incontinent as a result of that treatment. Very severe side effects resulting from treatment of a problem that may not be life-threatening or that may not cause significant health problems in an individual.
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#44
You're overlooking that it's not just about money or allocation of healthcare resources. Quality of life factors into this issue: Some of the men who receive aggressive treatment become impotent or incontinent as a result of that treatment. Very severe side effects resulting from treatment of a problem that may not be life-threatening or that may not cause significant health problems in an individual.
I see, following from this recommendation - Medicare and HMO's and insurance companies refusing to pay for the PSA, although I doubt, in a blood screen, that it adds much to the cost. Now, I would pay extra for the test results, but not all can.
So, I see a committee making a health decision for me as regards my getting all the info I need to make more valid decisions. I don't know whether or not I would have a biopsy, but I want that choice. I want to make it myself, not some committee.
Historically, I have made several very significant medical decisions AGAINST the "common wisdom" and "medical advice" for my son and for myself, and now for my wife. These were made after extensive research, consultation and thought - and in each case, I was right, and the medical world was wrong.
Last edited by DnvrFox; 10-09-11 at 06:20 PM.
#45
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Nobody is taking anything away from you. It sounds to me like you are working a political agenda, not a medical/scientific one.
#46
I don't know where you get that. Yes, I do see the results of this task force's recommendations eventually removing the PSA test from those paid for by various health providers. Medical or political? I guess they are sort of hard to separate in today's rather complex medical/political environment. I seriously doubt there is a pure medical/scinetific agenda. Do you think that there are any medical/scientific decisons/advice separated in some way from politics?
#47
Let's play that tune. Let’s say your PSA test comes back elevated out of the normal range and the digital exam shows your prostate enlarged. You now have the info from the tests you wanted. Tests you can get regardless of the recommendations in the study you referenced. OK. What is it you think you now know? What is your next move?
Not trying to be a butt. My own GP, My Urologist and even my own daughter (Ya, she is also an MD) informed me of the PSA controversy early in the process. The controversy regarding routine PSA screening, and the results, have been around for a long time.
Bottom line; the majority of men on this forum, if they are lucky enough to live long enough, will die with prostate cancer, not of prostate Cancer.
Should men be tested routinely? Hell, I don’t know. I just know it is not the silver bullet like the current crop of movie stars and sports figures pimping the tests on TV would have you believe.
#48
Let's play that tune. Let’s say your PSA test comes back elevated out of the normal range and the digital exam shows your prostate enlarged. You now have the info from the tests you wanted. Tests you can get regardless of the recommendations in the study you referenced. OK. What is it you think you now know? What is your next move?
Since my digital exam and my PSA test are indicative of absolutely no problem at this time, I have not pursued any of the above. But, the above, at a minimum is what I would consider.
#49
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You're overlooking that it's not just about money or allocation of healthcare resources. Quality of life factors into this issue: Some of the men who receive aggressive treatment become impotent or incontinent as a result of that treatment. Very severe side effects resulting from treatment of a problem that may not be life-threatening or that may not cause significant health problems in an individual.
Whenever though, I see a paper like this, I want to know who funded it, the PSA test is expensive, so an Insurer might not want to cover it, they would be willing to fund studies that prove against the test, to justify it. Here in Ontario, Canada, the Liberals promised to cover it for all men over 50 if reelected and they were, this will cost about $30 million dollars a year, but this may be one of the things that goes away if provincial budgets get tight.
#50
Originally Posted by springs
It sounds to me like you are working a political agenda, not a medical/scientific one.
Originally Posted by wogster
Here in Ontario, Canada, the Liberals promised to cover it for all men over 50 if reelected and they were, this will cost about $30 million dollars a year, but this may be one of the things that goes away if provincial budgets get tight.
Last edited by DnvrFox; 10-09-11 at 08:14 PM.





