Abstract

Prostate Cancer Awareness Week began in 1989 to raise public awareness of the disease and impact on its clinical dynamics. Prior to 1990, prostate carcinoma was usually diagnosed in symptomatic men as advanced and ipso facto incurable. A 5-year longitudinal study of screening and early detection was initiated in 1992, involving 250 centers that tested over 50,000 men annually. The study analyzed the following: 1) the efficacy of digital rectal examination and prostate specific antigen (PSA) tests for the early detection of prostate carcinoma, 2) the impact of serial screening on stage of disease at diagnosis and cancer detection, 3) age and race specific reference ranges for PSA, 4) prostate carcinoma risk factors, and 5) psychosocial variables that influence the appropriateness and acceptability of both screening and treatment. Community-based screening for prostate carcinoma is as effective as programs conducted at academic centers, but annual testing may not be necessary for all men. Participants in community screening programs may require more prescreening information and education regarding the potential risks and benefits of screening, and also regarding the cascade of diagnostic and treatment decisions that follow an abnormal digital rectal examination or an elevated PSA finding. Community-based prostate carcinoma screening programs have contributed to the shift in the diagnosis of prostate carcinoma at an earlier stage. They provide data that are useful in studying the natural course of prostate carcinoma and in designing studies of the effect that prostate carcinoma screening has on mortality from the disease.

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