More Prostate Cancer Facts
Like other cancers, prostate cancer is a disease of
cells growing out of control. Spurred by changes in the genes, the
glandular cells of the prostate multiply abnormally. These cancer cells
may cross tissue barriers and may then spread throughout the body.
Compared with most cancers, prostate cancer tends to
grow slowly. It may be decades from the time the earliest cell changes can
be detected under a microscope until the cancer gets big enough to cause
symptoms.
By age 50, one-third of American men have
microscopic signs of prostate cancer, and by age 75, half to
three-quarters of men's prostates will have cancerous changes. Most of
these cancers either remain latent, producing no signs or symptoms, or
they are so slow-growing, or indolent, that they never become a serious
threat to health.
A much smaller number of men will actually be
treated for prostate cancer. About 16 percent of American men will be
diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime; 8 percent will
develop significant symptoms; and 3 percent will die of the disease.
The late 1980s saw a sharp hike in the number of
cases being diagnosed. By 1997, the number of new cases of prostate cancer
reached an estimated 209,000, more than double the 90,000 cases identified
just 10 years earlier. However, recent statistics show that the incidence
rate (the number of cases diagnosed per 100,000 men per year) has begun to
decline.
Much of the dramatic surge in the detection of
prostate cancer cases can be traced to the growing use of procedures and
tests that, intentionally or not, reveal small, symptom-free cancers, many
of which otherwise would have gone unnoticed.
Before the 1980s, prostate cancer usually was
diagnosed either when it caused symptoms or during a digital rectal exam
(DRE).
It was in the mid-1980s, when doctors began using
the transurethral resection of the prostate (TURF) procedure to treat
benign prostate enlargement, that small, even microscopic cancers began
turning up in prostate tissue samples removed at surgery.
The number of prostate cancer diagnoses rose even
faster in the late 1980s when doctors began to add the blood test for
prostate-specific antigen (PSA) to regular checkups. A National Cancer
Institute (NCI) study showed that doctors increased their use of the PSA
test for men ages 65 or older-the age group most susceptible to prostate
cancer-from 1,430 per 100,000 men in 1988 to 18,000 per 100,000 men in
1991.
Until recently, death rates, too, were edging
steadily upward. In 1932, prostate cancer killed 17 of every 100,000
American men. By 1991, this number reached 25 of every 100,000. The
figures for African-American men are even higher-55 of every 100,000.
However, in the past several years, death rates, like incidence rates,
appear to have been declining.
No one knows why prostate death rates went up. It is
possible that, as more older men were diagnosed with prostate cancer, the
disease was sometimes listed as the cause of death even when a man died of
something else.
The reasons for the more recent death-rate decrease
are also unclear, but the decrease may reflect improved treatment.
Risk Factors for Prostate Cancer
A risk factor is something that increases a person's
chances of getting cancer. Risk factors don't necessarily cause cancer.
Rather, they are indicators, statistically associated with an increase in
a person's chances for getting a particular disease.
One risk factor for prostate cancer is age. Simply
growing older increases a man's risk for getting prostate cancer. More
than 75 percent of prostate cancer cases are diagnosed in men ages 65 or
older; just 7 percent of cases occur in men younger than age 60. The
average age at diagnosis is 72.
Another risk factor is race. African-American men
have the world's highest incidence of prostate cancer-a third higher than
white Americans. By contrast, Asian immigrants to the United States have
much lower rates.
Family history also may play a role. For instance,
risk increases for men whose father or brothers have prostate cancer. The
risk is more than 10 times higher for a man who has three relatives with
the disease. Risk may also be increased to some extent for men whose
female relatives have a high incidence of breast cancer.
Researchers increasingly are looking at hormonal and
hereditary factors and at diet, environmental exposures, and other
lifestyle changes in relation to prostate cancer. For example, in
countries such as China and Japan where low-fat diets are the norm, few
men are diagnosed with prostate cancer. However, the incidence of prostate
cancer is considerably higher among men who move from these countries to
the United States, and the higher incidence persists in their sons'
generation.
Researchers also are looking at the role of
vasectomy in prostate cancer. Vasectomy is a surgical procedure that
prevents men from fathering children. Some studies have suggested that
vasectomies increase the risk of prostate cancer, although other studies
failed to find such a link.
Symptoms of Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer can grow quietly for years, which
means most men with the disease have no obvious symptoms. When symptoms
finally appear, they often are similar to those caused by prostate
enlargement: difficulty urinating; a weak stream; a frequent urge to
urinate, especially during the night; painful or burning urination; blood
in the urine.
When cancer grows through the prostate capsule, it
invades nearby tissues. It also may spread to the lymph nodes of the
pelvis, or it may spread throughout the body (metastasize) via the
bloodstream or the lymphatic system. Because prostate cancer tends to
metastasize to the bone, bone pain, particularly in the back, can be
another symptom of prostate cancer.
Early Detection of Prostate Cancer
Some doctors recommend screening for prostate
cancer. Screening, as distinct from diagnosis, looks for signs of disease
in people who have no cancer symptoms.
Screening for prostate cancer is controversial,
because it is not yet known if the process actually saves lives, and it is
not always clear that benefits outweigh the risks of diagnostic tests and
treatments.
The main screening tools for prostate cancer are the
DRE and the PSA test.
The higher a man's PSA level, the more likely that
cancer could be in the picture. During screenings in men ages 50 or older,
85 of every 100 men will have normal PSA levels (4 ng/ml or below). Among
the remaining 15 men, only 3 will have biopsies that show cancer.
Neither PSA nor DRE accurately identifies all
cancers. The PSA test does a better job than DRE, but it still misses
about one-third of cancers that are clinically localized (appear not to
have grown through the prostate capsule).
It should be noted, though, that in spite of
possible inaccuracy, most tumors that are found through screening are
indeed early cancers.
Still, it is troublesome that PSA and DRE can
falsely suggest cancer where none exists. Most men with an elevated PSA
(or an abnormal DRE) go on to have additional diagnostic tests. Yet the
majority of these men do not have cancer and will suffer needless anxiety.
Some recent refinements designed to make PSA testing
more accurate and more precise are under clinical study. For instance, PSA
density relates a man's PSA level to the size of his prostate, which can
be estimated through ultrasound. PSA velocity is based on changes in PSA
levels over time; a sharp rise from a baseline level raises the suspicion
of cancer.
PSA circulates in the blood in two forms: free or
attached to a protein molecule. In the case of a benign enlargement, there
is more free PSA, while cancer produces more of the attached form,
although the reasons for this difference are not well understood.
As for DRE, this test is most accurate when
performed by a doctor who is highly skilled in such a procedure. But the
procedure does have problems, often missing many small cancers, especially
cancers toward the front of the prostate gland or deep within it. The exam
also is notoriously unpopular among men and even among some doctors. Many
men say they find the test embarrassing and uncomfortable. Studies also
suggest that some physicians are reluctant to do rectal exams.
Even with early detection, there is as yet no proof
that finding and treating asymptomatic prostate cancers do more good than
harm. The reason: Many prostate cancers found through screening are
slow-growing and might never cause symptoms. So far, it has not been
possible to distinguish these slow-growing tumors from tumors that are aggressive
and deadly. What is known is that treatment can have serious side effects,
some of which are permanent.
Some insight into the detection dilemma could be
forthcoming from the NCI's Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO)
Cancer Screening Trial. Some 37,000 men ages 55 to 74 are being screened,
and those positive on either PSA or DRE will receive a diagnostic
followup.
The study will determine if these men are less
likely to die of prostate cancer than a comparison group of men who have
not been screened. The trial will also assess how well PSA levels
correspond to the presence and size of a tumor.
When completed, this study, along with similar
PSA/DRE studies that are going on in Europe, should make it clear whether
the possible benefit of screening outweighs the harm.
In the meantime, each man needs to consult with his
doctor and come to his own decision.
Do You Want To Be Screened?
The theoretical advantage of finding cancers early,
before they cause symptoms, is that early cancers are less likely to have
spread and may be easier to treat. Like other advanced cancers,
advanced-stage prostate cancer can be a terrible disease.
But the disadvantage of screening is that it often
leads to unnecessary additional diagnostic procedures.
Two basic questions still have no definitive
answers: How frequently do the screening procedures such as PSA and DRE
identify cancer? How frequently will finding prostate cancer produce a net
benefit?
Studies designed to answer these questions are under
way, but results won't be available for years. Earlier studies suffer from
a variety of shortcomings, and none has proven that screening for prostate
cancer decreases the risk of dying from the disease.
Lacking clear-cut answers, different organizations
propose different guidelines. For example:
- The American Cancer Society (ACS) recommends
that both the PSA blood test and DRE should be offered annually to men
ages 50 or older with at least a 10-year life expectancy. ACS adds
that all men who are offered the option of screening should be given
complete information on the benefits and risks of the procedures.
African-American men or men with a strong family history of prostate
cancer may be offered screening earlier, at age 45, for example. A
strong family history means that prostate cancer has been detected in
two or more first degree relatives such as a father or brother.
- The American Urological Association endorses the
American Cancer Society's screening policy: Men who choose to undergo
screening should begin at age 50. However, men in high risk groups may
begin at age 45.
- The United States Preventive Services Task
Force, its Canadian counterpart, and the American College of
Physicians take a different position from that of the American
Urological Association and the American Cancer Society: They recommend
against the use of the PSA test for routine screening.
As you can see, opinions vary widely. Few doctors
would recommend screening to a man older than age 80 or to a man in poor
health. But for most men there is no "right" answer. It is
important for you to make your own decision, taking into consideration the
advice of your doctor and the best, most up-to-date information you can
gather.
Do you want to be screened for prostate cancer?
In coming to your decision, it's important to
consider how you would respond to a diagnosis of cancer. Prostate cancer
is usually a slow-growing type of disease, but there are some fastgrowing
prostate cancers as well. Doctors can't always be sure what type of
prostate cancer growth is present in your particular case. If you find out
that you have prostate cancer, would you be able and willing to undergo
surgery or radiotherapy, which carry the risk of incontinence and sexual
impotence?
If you answer "yes," screening is an
option. If "no," screening for prostate cancer may not be for
you.
Diagnosing and Evaluating Prostate Cancer
Biopsy
Like other cancers, prostate cancer can actually be
diagnosed only by examining tissue under a microscope. Whenever cancer is
suspected, the diagnosis must be confirmed by a biopsy.
If your symptoms, the DRE, or your PSA test suggest
cancer, your doctor will refer you to a urologist for a biopsy. The biopsy
is typically performed in the urologist's office. The urologist gets an
image of the prostate through a transrectal ultrasound probe. Then, to
obtain tissue samples, the doctor inserts thin biopsy needles into areas
of the gland that feel or look suspicious. Bits of tissue are removed from
each site through the hollow needles. Each snip causes a sharp sting.
The tissue samples are then turned over to a
pathologist, a doctor who specializes in the study of the microscopic cell
and tissue changes produced by disease.
When a biopsy is prompted by an elevated PSA, rather
than an abnormal area in the prostate gland detected by a rectal exam, the
urologist may take random samples from six or more prostate areas. In a
so-called pattern biopsy, the tissue samples are obtained from carefully
spaced sectors of the gland; this helps establish the size and extent of
any cancer.
Most men who have biopsies following routine exams
do not have cancer. About three-quarters of the biopsies triggered by an
abnormal DRE, and more than four-fifths of those instigated by an elevated
PSA, reveal no cancer.
You may want to talk with your physician about the
biopsy results. If there is any doubt about the diagnosis, you can get a
second opinion from another pathologist.
Biopsies can miss cancer, too, about one time out of
five. If your doctor strongly suspects cancer on clinical grounds, but the
biopsy was negative, he or she may recommend a second biopsy.
If a Biopsy Is Positive
A diagnosis of prostate cancer obviously presents
a man with complex decisions. He needs to understand the ramifications
of the various options available to him. There are several levels, or
stages, of prostate cancer, all of which call for different approaches
to treatment. Moreover, for some stages of prostate cancer, there are
several types of treatment, and it is not always clear which one is
best. In fact, because treatment can produce some serious and life-long
side effects-and because prostate cancer may grow very slowly-treatment
may not always be better than no treatment. For a much more- complete
discussion of these issues, see What You Need To Know About Prostate
Cancer, a booklet available from NCI.
Preventing Prostate Cancer
Researchers are investigating the possibility that
drugs might keep latent prostate cancers from developing into active
cancers. In the NCI's Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT), 18,000
healthy men age 55 or older are taking either finasteride (currently used
to shrink the prostate in BPH) or a placebo every day for 7 to 10
years. Smaller trials are testing a variety of other medications or
chemicals for their ability to prevent prostate cancer.
Since prostate cancer is less common in populations
with low-fat, high-fiber diets, scientists are also looking into the
possibility of using diet to prevent prostate cancer from developing.
There is still no evidence to show that switching to a healthy diet after
years of eating high-fat foods will make a difference, but small studies
are testing the effects of a low-fat, high-soy diet among men who have an
increased risk of prostate cancer and men who have already been treated
for prostate cancer. One study found less prostate cancer among men who
eat lots of tomato-based foods, especially tomato sauce cooked with a
little olive oil.
Questions To Ask Your Doctor
We hope that this booklet has answered many of your
questions about prostate changers. However, no booklet can take the plain
of talking directly with your doctor. If you don't fully understand what
the doctor is saying, ask him or her to explain further.
Many men find it helpful to write down their
questions ahead of time. Below is a list of some common questions that men
have. You may have others. Jot them down as you think of them and take the
list with you when you see your doctor.
- What is causing my prostate symptoms? Are they a sign of cancer?
- What tests do you recommend? Why?
- If I don't have cancer, what can I do about my symptoms? What if
they get worse ?
- If I do have prostate cancer, where can I get information about my
treatment options?
Source: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
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