Extending the prostate cancer screening interval to 2 or 4 years would substantially delay the detection of advanced prostate cancers.

Researchers form the Northwestern University, Chicago, used data from more than 18,000 men screened for prostate cancer at 6-month to 1-year intervals to determine the potential delay in detection that could result from 2- and 4-year PSA screening intervals. A total of 377 (2.0 percent) of the subjects were diagnosed with prostate cancer over 8 years of follow-up. Increasing the screening interval from 1 year to 2 years would have resulted in at least a 4-month delay in prostate cancer detection in 62 percent of the men, the researchers say. More than three quarters of the men would have experienced a mean delay of detection of 12 months were the screening interval extended to 4 years. Many of these diagnosed tumours were "potentially aggressive," they warn.
Infrequent screening may delay the detection of prostate cancer in men most likely to benefit from early diagnosis, they suggest. However, further studies are needed before recommending screening intervals longer than 1 year.
April 2005
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