Prostate-Cancer Mortality at 11 Years of Follow-up

Fritz H. Schröder(Erasmus MC), Jonas Hugosson(University of Gothenburg), Monique J. Roobol, Teuvo L.J. Tammela(Erasmus MC), Stefano Ciatto(University of Gothenburg), Vera Nelen(Provincial Institute for Hygiene), Maciej Kwiatkowski(Kantonsspital Aarau), M. Luján(Hospital Universitario Infanta Cristina), Hans Lilja(Lund University), Marco Zappa(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Louis Denis, Franz Recker(Kantonsspital Aarau), Álvaro Páez(Hospital Universitario de Fuenlabrada), Liisa Määttänen(Finnish Cancer Registry), Chris H. Bangma, Gunnar Aus(Capio Lundby Sjukhus), Sigrid Carlsson(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Arnauld Villers(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Lille), Xavier Rébillard, Theodorus van der Kwast, Paula Kujala(Erasmus MC), B. G. Blijenberg(Erasmus MC), Ulf‐Håkan Stenman(Helsinki University Hospital), Andreas Huber(Kantonsspital Aarau), Kimmo Taari(Helsinki University Hospital), M Hakama(Tampere University), Sue Moss(Queen Mary University of London), Harry J. de Koning(Erasmus MC), Anssi Auvinen(Tampere University)
New England Journal of Medicine
March 14, 2012
Cited by 1,240Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Several trials evaluating the effect of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing on prostate-cancer mortality have shown conflicting results. We updated prostate-cancer mortality in the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer with 2 additional years of follow-up. METHODS: The study involved 182,160 men between the ages of 50 and 74 years at entry, with a predefined core age group of 162,388 men 55 to 69 years of age. The trial was conducted in eight European countries. Men who were randomly assigned to the screening group were offered PSA-based screening, whereas those in the control group were not offered such screening. The primary outcome was mortality from prostate cancer. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 11 years in the core age group, the relative reduction in the risk of death from prostate cancer in the screening group was 21% (rate ratio, 0.79; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.68 to 0.91; P=0.001), and 29% after adjustment for noncompliance. The absolute reduction in mortality in the screening group was 0.10 deaths per 1000 person-years or 1.07 deaths per 1000 men who underwent randomization. The rate ratio for death from prostate cancer during follow-up years 10 and 11 was 0.62 (95% CI, 0.45 to 0.85; P=0.003). To prevent one death from prostate cancer at 11 years of follow-up, 1055 men would need to be invited for screening and 37 cancers would need to be detected. There was no significant between-group difference in all-cause mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Analyses after 2 additional years of follow-up consolidated our previous finding that PSA-based screening significantly reduced mortality from prostate cancer but did not affect all-cause mortality. (Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN49127736.).


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