Lead time associated with screening for prostate cancer
Open Access
- 7 October 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 108 (1) , 122-129
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.11554
Abstract
Screening serum levels of prostate‐specific antigen (PSA) is now a major strategy for early detection of prostate cancer (PC). Quantification of the lead time thus obtained is important both for understanding the development of PC and for evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of widespread screening. In our study, 1,233 randomly selected men living in Stockholm in 1988 were invited to participate in an early detection (ED) program, in which suspicious findings provided by digital rectal examination (DRE), transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS) and/or a PSA value ≥10.0 ng/mL were followed up by biopsy. The cumulative incidence (Kaplan‐Meier) of PC in the 946 participants (ED) during 12 years of follow‐up was compared to that of an age‐matched, randomly selected reference population (RP) of 657 men for whom PSA values (from frozen serum samples) could also be obtained. The PC incidence in men in the RP with PSA values ≥3.0 ng/mL reached the corresponding level for the ED group after 10.6 years (the “catch‐up” point). After 12 years of follow‐up, the estimated median lead time for men with PSA values in this interval was 4.5 years in the ED population, compared to 7.8 years in the RP. With 20 years of follow‐up, the estimated median lead time of the RP was enhanced to 10.7 years. The lead time in connection with PC was influenced by the initial PSA level (although with large variations), length of follow‐up and sensitivity of the ED procedure employed. The ED program described here was not associated with major overdetection.Keywords
Funding Information
- Swedish Cancer Society (4675-B02-01XAB, 3555)
- Thure and Brita Grafström Foundation
- Swedish Research Council, Medicine, 7903
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alternative definitions of comparable case groups and estimates of lead time and benefit time in randomized cancer screening trialsStatistics in Medicine, 2002
- Prostate cancer mortality reduction by screening: Power and time frame with complete enrollment in the European randomised screening for prostate cancer (ERSPC) trialInternational Journal of Cancer, 2001
- Large‐scale randomized prostate cancer screening trials: Program performances in the European randomized screening for prostate cancer trial and the prostate, lung, colorectal and ovary cancer trialInternational Journal of Cancer, 2001
- Would prostate cancer detected by screening withprostate-specific antigen develop into clinical cancer if left undiagnosed? A comparison of two population-based studies in SwedenBJU International, 2000
- TRENDS IN MORTALITY RATES IN PATIENTS WITH PROSTATE CANCER DURING THE ERA OF PROSTATE SPECIFIC ANTIGEN SCREENINGJournal of Urology, 2000
- CHARACTERISTICS OF SCREENING DETECTED PROSTATE CANCER IN MEN 50 TO 66 YEARS OLD WITH 3 TO 4 NG./ML. PROSTATE SPECIFIC ANTIGENJournal of Urology, 1998
- Serum concentrations of prostate specific antigen and its complex with α1-antichymotrypsin before diagnosis of prostate cancerThe Lancet, 1994
- Measurement of Prostate-Specific Antigen in Serum as a Screening Test for Prostate CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Fine-Needle Aspiration Biopsy with A New Automatic Fine-Needle Gun Versus Histological Core in Ultrasonically-Guided Transrectal Biopsy for Detection of Prostate CancerActa Oncologica, 1991
- Completeness of the Swedish Cancer Register Non-Notified Cancer Cases Recorded on Death Certificates in 1978Acta Radiologica: Oncology, 1984