• Dépistage, diagnostic, pronostic

  • Politiques et programmes de dépistages

  • Prostate

Expected population impacts of discontinued prostate-specific antigen screening

Menée à l'aide de deux modèles mathématiques, cette étude américaine estime, sur la période 2013-2025, l'incidence du cancer de la prostate et la mortalité en fonction de deux types de programme organisé de dépistage : l'un préconisant la surveillance du niveau sérique du PSA jusqu'à 70 ans, l'autre au-delà de 70 ans

BACKGROUND : Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening for prostate cancer has high risks of overdiagnosis, particularly among older men, and reports from screening trials indicate that it saves few lives after 11 to 13 years of follow-up. New clinical guidelines recommend against PSA screening for all men or for men aged >70 years, but, to the authors' knowledge, the expected population effects of these guidelines have not been studied to date.

METHODS : Two models of prostate cancer natural history and diagnosis were previously developed using reconstructed PSA screening patterns and prostate cancer incidence in the United States. Assuming a survival benefit of PSA screening consistent with the screening trials, the authors used the models to predict incidence and mortality rates for the period from 2013 through 2025 under continued PSA screening and under discontinued PSA screening for all men or for men aged >70 years.

RESULTS : The models predicted that continuation of recent screening rates will overdiagnose 710,000 to 1,120,000 men (range between models) but will avoid 36,000 to 57,000 cancer deaths over the period 2013 through 2025. Discontinued screening for all men eliminated 100% of overdiagnoses but failed to prevent 100% of avoidable cancer deaths. Continued screening for men aged <70 years eliminated 64% to 66% of overdiagnoses but failed to prevent 36% to 39% of avoidable cancer deaths.

CONCLUSIONS : Discontinuing PSA screening for all men may generate many avoidable cancer deaths. Continuing PSA screening for men aged <70 years could prevent greater than one-half of these avoidable cancer deaths while dramatically reducing overdiagnoses compared with continued PSA screening for all ages

Cancer , résumé, 2013

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