of the 6,537 men who were given a dre, 57 had suspicious findings that required referral for biopsy. only three were eventually found to have cancer. the detection rate was considerably higher when a psa was used for initial screening.
“the dre was giving a negative result in 99 per cent of cases and even those that were deemed to be suspicious had a low detection rate,” krilaviciute said. “results we’ve seen from the probase trial show that psa testing at the age of 45 detected
four times more prostate cancers.”
according to the team, digital rectal exams may be falling short because the tissue in the prostate, particularly in young men, may be too slight for detection by a finger. also, depending on the part of the prostate affected, evidence of the disease may simply be hard to reach.
“early stage cancer may not have the size and stiffness to be palpable,” said peter albers, senior author of the study and a urologist at düsseldorf university. “separate analysis that used mri scans before biopsies to locate cancers in the prostate showed that about 80 per cent of these are in an area that should be easy to reach with a finger and still cancers were not detectable by dre.”
psa and mri may be a more effective screening protocol
prostate cancer is the fourth most common cancer in canada — and number one among men — with an estimated 24,600 people receiving a diagnosis in 2022, according to the canadian cancer society. around 4,600 men were expected to have succumbed to the disease last year.
eight provinces and three territories cover the cost of the
psa test
by referral without requiring symptoms, except ontario and british columbia.