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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine

Prostate Screening Bias Against Obese Men Leads to Late Detection, Less Surgical Success

Aggressiveness of obese men's late-detected tumors and that they may be more difficult to remove, is a double whammy for fat guys

   
 

More about prostate cancer below.

 

Aug. 8, 2008 – Older men, still trying to digest the government recommendation last week that those 75 or older should not be recommended for prostate cancer screening, today got a new warning. It says tests for elevated levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in the blood - the gold standard screening test for prostate cancer - may be biased against obese men, whose PSA levels tend to be deceptively low. This delays diagnosis and allows development of more aggressive cancers.

"We know that obese men tend to have lower PSA values than their normal-weight counterparts, possibly caused by larger blood volumes which dilute the readings," said Stephen Freedland, M.D., a urologist at Duke and the Durham VA, and lead investigator on this study.

 

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"Now we know some of the real implications of this -- that these men are at a disadvantage in terms of prognosis compared to normal-weight men."

The study was led by study led by investigators in the Duke Prostate Center and the Durham Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center.

"We used patient data to examine the association between body mass index, or BMI -- a measure of obesity -- and the amount of disease discovered after surgery to remove the prostate, " Freedland said.

"We compared men who had their cancers detected by PSA screening to those who had an abnormal digital rectal exam, which may not confer the same bias against obese men."

The prostate is the gland below a man's bladder that produces fluid for semen. Prostate cancer is the third most common cause of death from cancer in men of all ages. It is rare in men younger than 40.

Levels of a substance called prostate specific antigen (PSA) is often high in men with prostate cancer. However, PSA can also be high with other prostate conditions. Since the PSA test became common, most prostate cancers are found before they cause symptoms. Symptoms of prostate cancer may include

>> Problems passing urine, such as pain, difficulty starting or stopping the stream, or dribbling

>> Low back pain

>> Pain with ejaculation

Prostate cancer treatment often depends on the stage of the cancer. How fast the cancer grows and how different it is from surrounding tissue helps determine the stage. Treatment may include surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy or control of hormones that affect the cancer.

> More info at MedlinePLUS

> More at National Cancer Institute

The researchers looked at a total of nearly 3,400 men in the years since 2000, when PSA screening became the gold standard test for prostate cancer.

Obese patients whose cancer was diagnosed by PSA testing had more than twice the risk of cancer recurrence after surgery than their normal-weight counterparts, Freedland said.

"In contrast, obese men with abnormal digital rectal exams had similar outcomes as normal-weight men," Freedland said.

Prostate cancer surgery also more challenging in obese

Another Duke study published in the same issue of the journal provides further substantiation of the concern that obese men have poorer prognoses than normal-weight men. This study showed that obese men have a higher rate of positive surgical margins after surgery to remove the prostate, meaning that there was a higher chance cancer was left behind.

This suggests that prostate cancer surgery is technically more challenging in obese men, making complete tumor removal harder, according to Jayakrishnan Jayachandran, M.D., a urological oncology fellow at Duke and lead investigator on the second study.

"The aggressiveness of obese men's tumors, coupled with the fact that they may be more difficult to remove, is like a double whammy for being obese," Jayachandran said.

"The least we can do is find a way to level the playing field when it comes to diagnostic tools," Freedland said.

PSA screening has been the most common tool used to detect prostate cancer over the past eight to ten years; men are less commonly diagnosed based on digital rectal exam alone.

The researchers are hopeful that this data, coupled with the earlier data on which it builds, may be a catalyst to encourage alternative screening methods for obese men, or a lower threshold for worrisome PSA levels in obese men.

"Obesity is very common in the United States, so this potentially affects a lot of people," Freedland said. "We can't forget that when we use the term obese we are not just talking about very, very large men. A man who is 5 foot 9 and weighs 203 pounds would be considered obese."

The researchers published their findings online in the journal BJU International. The study was funded by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, the National Institutes of Health, the Georgia Cancer Coalition, the United States Department of Defense, the Prostate Cancer Research Program and the American Urological Association Foundation's Astellas Rising Star in Urology Award, given to Freedland.

Other researchers involved with the PSA study include Leon Sun and Judd Moul of Duke; Christopher Kane of the University of California – San Diego; Joseph Presti of Stanford; Martha Terris of the Medical College of Georgia; and William Aronson of the University of California – Los Angeles.


Links to more SeniorJournal.com reports on Prostate Cancer:

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Feb. 28, 2008


Prostate Cancer Vaccine Successfully Prevents Cancer in 90 Percent of Lab Mice

Might work for men with rising levels of PSA, says USC researcher

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Urine Test Leads to More Accurate Diagnoses of Prostate Cancer

Far more accurate than the PSA blood test currently in use worldwide - Feb. 1, 2008


Finasteride May Prevent Prostate Cancer But Is It Worth the Sacrifice?

Pros, cons of drug proven to prevent prostate cancer should be considered, researchers say - Jan. 21, 2008


Male Reluctance to Discuss Bowel, Sexual Problems Misguides Prostate Cancer Treatment

One third in a study of treatment choices appear to have received inappropriate therapies - Nov. 26, 2007


Men Who are Too Fat Run Risk of Undetected Prostate Cancer

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Prostate Cancer Increases Hip Fracture Risk by Eight for 'Almost' Senior Citizens

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Surgery Wins as Best Prostate Cancer Treatment for Long-Term Survival

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Learning More About Prostate Cancer Screening Causes Many Men to Opt Out

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Popular Prostate Cancer Treatment May Encourage Spread of the Disease

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Octogenarians Not Too Old for Cancer Surgery, Say Mayo Clinic Researchers

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August 15, 2006 - Also in this news report you will find links to more associations between prostate cancer and nutrition and supplements.


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Potential of Prostate Cancer Spread Detected Early by New Test

June 21, 2006

 

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