Mortality Results from a Randomized Prostate-Cancer Screening Trial
National Institutes of Health · Washington University in St. Louis · +17 more institutions
Abstract
The effect of screening with prostate-specific-antigen (PSA) testing and digital rectal examination on the rate of death from prostate cancer is unknown. This is the first report from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial on prostate-cancer mortality.
From 1993 through 2001, we randomly assigned 76,693 men at 10 U.S. study centers to receive either annual screening (38,343 subjects) or usual care as the control (38,350 subjects). Men in the screening group were offered annual PSA testing for 6 years and digital rectal examination for 4 years. The subjects and health care providers received the results and decided on the type of follow-up evaluation. Usual care sometimes included screening, as some organizations have recommended. The numbers of all cancers and deaths and causes of death were ascertained.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 309.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
24- GLGerald L. AndrioleCorresponding
National Institutes of Health, Washington University in St. Louis
- EDE. David Crawford
National Institutes of Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado Denver
- RLRobert L. Grubb
- SSSaundra S. Buys
National Institutes of Health, Huntsman Cancer Institute
- DCDavid Chia
National Institutes of Health
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Rectal examination
- Prostate cancer
- Randomized controlled trial
- Prostate
- Oncology
- Prostate-specific antigen
- Internal medicine
- Good health and well-being