News

PSA Screening Gets Short Shrift in Exam Room


 

Men who have undergone screening for prostate-specific antigen or who have declined such testing say they often received only limited information about the test from their physicians, according to a survey of a nationally representative sample of men in the general U.S. population.

Only 21% of the men said that their physicians discussed the pros and cons of PSA screening and asked about their preference, as is recommended in virtually all guidelines from major professional organizations.

Dr. Richard M. Hoffman of the New Mexico VA Health Care System, Albuquerque, and his associates assessed these issues as part of the National Survey of Medical Decisions (DECISIONS) study, a survey of Americans aged 40 and older designed to characterize the decision-making process in various medical issues. The prostate cancer module of this study surveyed men who had accepted or declined PSA screening during the past 2 years.

Overall, 30% of the respondents said they never discussed PSA testing with their physician before deciding whether to undergo screening, a finding that Dr. Hoffman and his colleagues termed “disconcerting.” Fully 45% said they were never asked about their preference regarding PSA testing.

Of those whose physicians did discuss PSA testing, 87% discussed only the benefits and not the disadvantages of screening. Among men whose physicians discussed PSA testing, 79% went on to have the test done (Arch. Intern. Med. 2009;169:1611-18). No financial conflicts of interest were reported.

Recommended Reading

Digoxin Appears to Prevent Prostate Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Tool Estimates Absolute Risk of Prostate Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Statin Use May Reduce Prostate Cancer Risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Hormonal Drug Approved for Prostate Cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Data Are Mixed on Prostate Screening Benefits
MDedge Family Medicine
Did PSA finding get lost in the shuffle?...Woman sent home from ER dies of aneurysm...more
MDedge Family Medicine
What’s best for your patient with BPH?
MDedge Family Medicine
How useful is a physical exam in diagnosing testicular torsion?
MDedge Family Medicine
Wrong Tx for 4 years...Negligence case hinges on penicillin allergy...more
MDedge Family Medicine
World Mental Health Day: Preventing suicide
MDedge Family Medicine