A while back the USPTF, despite the lack of clear evidence one way or the other, dictated as one would expect of an Government formed entity that PSA testing should be abandoned. Now in a JAMA Internal Medicine report they find little if any compliance. As is reported in Medscape:
The team analyzed data from the 2012 Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System, which is a joint initiative of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the US states. They focused on data
collected between January 2012 and February 2013, and identified male
respondents aged 50 or more without a history of prostate cancer or
prostate problem who reported undergoing prostate-specific antigen (PSA)
testing within the preceding year. The researchers found that
overall, 37.1% had been tested. But there was far more testing in older
men compared with younger men. Nearly half of the older men in the
survey had undergone PSA testing — 48.5% of men aged 70 to 74 years and
48.4% of men aged 65 to 69.
Now in a NEJM article this past March the authors concluded:
Extended follow-up confirmed a substantial reduction in mortality after
radical prostatectomy; the number needed to treat to prevent one death
continued to decrease when the treatment was modified according to age
at diagnosis and tumor risk. A large proportion of long-term survivors
in the watchful-waiting group have not required any palliative
treatment.
Thus survival is a true benefit and physicians are acting rationally as are patients. Yet the USPTF persists in its rationing and in my opinion unrealistic stance on this test. This is but one of the "benefits" I have previously discussed about the ACA.