False-positive screening results in the European randomized study of screening for prostate cancer

Pas encore traduit Pas encore traduit
Catégorie Primary study
JournalEuropean journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990)
Year 2011

Cet article est inclus dans 4 Systematic reviews Systematic reviews (4 references) 1 Broad synthesis Broad syntheses (1 reference)

This article is part of the following publication threads:
  • ERSPC [European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer] (44 documents)
Loading references information
Background: Screening for prostate cancer (PC) with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) has been shown to decrease mortality, but has adverse effects, such as false-positive (FP) screening results. We describe the frequency of FP results and assess their relation to subsequent screening attendance, test results and prostate cancer risk in a large randomized trial. Materials and methods: We included data from five centres of the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer, altogether over 61,000 screened men. Men were screened with PSA test at a 2-7 year interval depending on the centre; PSA cut-off was 3.0-4.0 ng/ml. A positive screen with no histologically confirmed PC in biopsy within 1 year was defined as an FP result. Results: Of the 61,604 men who were screened at least once, 17.8% had one or more FP result(s). Almost 20% of men who participated at all screening rounds had one or more FP result(s). More than half of the men with an FP result had another FP if screened again. Men with FP results had a fourfold risk of PC at subsequent screen (depending on the round, 10.0% versus 2.6-2.7% of men with negative screen, risk ratio 3.8-3.9). The PCs following an FP result were in 92.8% of cases localised and low-grade versus 90.4% following a screen-negative result. Conclusions: Our results show that FP results are common adverse effects in PC screening, as they affect at least one in six screened men. False-positive men are more prone to be diagnosed with PC but are also likely to have consistently high PSA levels. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Epistemonikos ID: 0f908ca028662051a68dbd287c2fc80c8e49490f
First added on: Apr 21, 2015