본문으로 건너뛰기
← 뒤로

Evaluating the Impact of Age on Prostate Cancer Overdiagnosis Using Long-Term Follow-Up From the CAP Randomised Trial.

무작위 임상시험 2/5 보강
International journal of cancer 📖 저널 OA 50.9% 2022: 0/3 OA 2023: 1/3 OA 2024: 6/16 OA 2025: 32/61 OA 2026: 135/241 OA 2022~2026 2026 OA Prostate Cancer Diagnosis and Treatm
Retraction 확인
출처
PubMed DOI OpenAlex 마지막 보강 2026-04-29

PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)

유사 논문
P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
In total, 2249 (1.19%) of 189,386 men invited for a PSA test in CAP had cancer detected at the one-off screen.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
Thus, prostate cancer overdiagnosis rises substantially with age due to competing mortality, and is relatively low for younger men. Accordingly, policies that enable opportunistic testing should be re-examined in settings where they have led to high rates of screening in older men.
OpenAlex 토픽 · Prostate Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Prostate Cancer Treatment and Research Global Cancer Incidence and Screening

Brentnall AR, Rebolj M, Sasieni P, Funston G, Gabe R, Vickers AJ

📖 무료 전문 🔓 OA PDF oa
📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Prostate cancer overdiagnosis is detection of prostate cancer through PSA testing that otherwise would not have been diagnosed within the patient's lifetime.

이 논문을 인용하기

↓ .bib ↓ .ris
APA A. R. Brentnall, Matejka Rebolj, et al. (2026). Evaluating the Impact of Age on Prostate Cancer Overdiagnosis Using Long-Term Follow-Up From the CAP Randomised Trial.. International journal of cancer. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.70492
MLA A. R. Brentnall, et al.. "Evaluating the Impact of Age on Prostate Cancer Overdiagnosis Using Long-Term Follow-Up From the CAP Randomised Trial.." International journal of cancer, 2026.
PMID 42015666 ↗
DOI 10.1002/ijc.70492

Abstract

Prostate cancer overdiagnosis is detection of prostate cancer through PSA testing that otherwise would not have been diagnosed within the patient's lifetime. It is a major concern to policymakers due to its impact on quality of life. We used long-term follow-up data from the CAP randomised trial of a one-off screen, and English male competing mortality rates (2021-23), to estimate the impact of age on excess prostate cancer incidence within 15 years ('overdiagnosis') using competing-risks methods. In total, 2249 (1.19%) of 189,386 men invited for a PSA test in CAP had cancer detected at the one-off screen. Prostate cancer cumulative incidence at 15 years was 7.08% (95% CI 6.95%-7.21%) in those invited to screening, compared with 6.94% (95% CI 6.82%-7.06%) in the control arm; an absolute excess incidence difference of 0.14% (95% CI -0.04% to 0.37%). Excess net incidence to 15 years was 0.14/1.19 = 11.7% (95% CI 0.0%-26.7%) of cases detected at a single prevalent screen. Accounting for competing mortality, men diagnosed at screening aged 50 years were projected to have a 16% chance the cancer would not have been detected within 15 years, rising to 32% if detected at screening aged 70 years and 58% aged 80 years. Thus, prostate cancer overdiagnosis rises substantially with age due to competing mortality, and is relatively low for younger men. Accordingly, policies that enable opportunistic testing should be re-examined in settings where they have led to high rates of screening in older men.

🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만

같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (1)

🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반

🔓 OA PDF 열기