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Last Updated: Sep 2009
What is Prostate Cancer?
Screening and Diagnosis:
Traditionally, prostate cancer screening consisted of digital-rectal examination. Since 1986, however, a blood test for a  tumor marker called prostate-specific antigen (PSA) has greatly increased the number of early-stage prostate cancers  diagnosed. An elevated level of PSA can indicate the presence of prostatic malignancy. Elevated PSA is further investigated  by an ultrasound test and needle biopsy , in which a fine needle is inserted into the gland and cells are extracted for  laboratory analysis. In some cases a bone scan is also performed to rule out metastatic disease. Because PSA tests detect not  only aggressive cancers but slow-growing cancers that are not life-threatening, many people disagree with routine PSA testing  of asymptomatic men, fearing that the test might lead to unnecessary anxiety or treatments that compromise quality of life  without assuring a longer life than a man ignorant of his condition would enjoy.

Treatment:
For most patients with localized tumors, surgical removal of the prostate gland (prostatectomy) is the initial treatment,  despite possible side effects of urinary incontinence and impotence. Localized prostate cancer can often be cured. After  surgery, a repeated blood test for protein-specific antigen can indicate whether any cancer remains. In metastatic disease,  other treatments are employed depending on the stage of the disease and the age and health of the patient. Treatment options  include external-beam radiation, implantation of radioactive isotopes, and palliative surgery. Hormonal manipulation by  giving estrogens or other drugs, or by orchiectomy (removal of the testes), is sometimes used to decrease levels of  testosterone. Very small cancers or slow-growing cancers in older men are sometimes watched, but not treated, without  compromising life expectancy. Experimental treatments under investigation include cryosurgery, destroying the tumor by  freezing.
Prostate cancer is a cancer originating in the prostate gland. Prostate cancer is the leading malignancy in men in the United  States and is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death in men. It occurs predominantly in older men; the median  age at diagnosis is 72 years. Black men have a higher incidence than white men. The cause of prostate cancer is unknown, but  the incidence varies markedly by geographic region, an indication that there are environmental factors that may trigger the  disease. For example, men in China and Japan have a low rate of prostate cancer, but the incidence rises in Chinese and  Japanese men who move to the United States.

The hormone testosterone is believed to have a role in the development of  prostate cancer, and studies have shown a relationship between high dietary fat intake and increased testosterone levels.  Prostate tumors are often slow growing. Around 95% are classified as adenocarcinomas (arising from epithelial glandular  tissue). The most common site of metastasis is the bone.
Prostate Cancer
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