Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Should I have that blood test for Prostate Cancer?

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Should I have that blood test for Prostate Cancer?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Should I have that blood test for Prostate Cancer?

2 PSA screening Understand what the PSA test is Identify when it should be used Describe the pros and cons of PSA testing

3 Prostate Cancer Commonest cause of cancer in men in the UK 2 nd commonest cause of cancer death in men in the UK Average age of diagnosis is 70 – 74 yrs of age Much less common under 50 yrs of age Average age of mortality is 80 – 84 yrs of age 1 in 26 men in the UK will die from Prostate Cancer

4 Risk Factors for Prostate Cancer Age (strongest risk factor) Family history – especially if relative diagnosed before age of 55 yrs –Also link to BRCA 1 and 2 so consider FHx breast cancer relative Black men > 3 times more likely than white men (oriental/asian men lowest risk) Diet inconclusive

5 What is the PSA? A Glyccoprotein which liquefies semen and aids sperm motility

6 PSA Testing ANY man aged over 50 who requests a PSA after careful consideration should be tested Expressed in benign and malignant conditions Test benefits –Diagnose cancer before symptoms –Diagnose at a stage where could be cured or life extended –Serial measurements may help in diagnosis Test limitations –PSA not diagnostic or tumour specific –False reassurance: 15% of men with a normal PSA will have Prostate Cancer and 2-3% will have high grade Prostate Cancer –Identification of cancers which may not become clinically evident in the patient’s lifetime

7 Stats Sensitivity (rules diagnosis in) –21 % for all prostate cancers –51 % for high grade prostate cancers –Using a PSA cut off of 4.0 Specificity (rules diagnosis out) –91 % for all prostate cancers –Using a PSA cut off of 4.0 Positive Predictive Value (proportion of men with an elevated PSA who have Prostate Cancer) –30 % for a PSA level of > 4.0 –Less than 1 in 3 men with a PSA of > 4.0 will have Prostate Cancer detected on biopsy

8 Conditions for PSA testing One should not check the PSA (has a half life of 2.2 days) –During an active UTI –If ejaculated within previous 48 hrs (rise of up to 0.8) –If exercised vigourously within previous 48 hrs –Had a DRE within 1 week (although some studies suggest minimal rise 0.26 –0.4) –Had a Prostate Biopsy within 1 week (rise of 7.9) –Nb 5 Alpha Reductase inihibitors may reduce PSA by 50% within 6 months DRE is useful for men with LUTS but not for asymptommatic men

9 Referrals If PSA raised above age specific limit –Refer Urology 2WW

10 Questions?


Download ppt "Should I have that blood test for Prostate Cancer?"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google