By David Samadi
Published June 26, 2015

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends against PSA (prostate specific antigen) screening for prostate cancer. The task force currently gives PSA screening a grade D, meaning that there is moderate or high certainty that the PSA test has no benefit or that the harms outweigh the benefits. This recommendation was first issued in 2011.
What’s wrong with the USPSTF guidelines?
In regards to population screening, the African-American male population is ignored, as well as the effect of family history and morbidity associated with prostate cancer. However, African-American men are 56 percent more likely to develop prostate cancer and more than twice as likely to die from the disease compared to Caucasian men. They are also more likely to develop aggressive prostate cancer.
Instead of focusing on the benefits of PSA screening and how much it has actually helped the health care system, their recommendations focus on the complications of treatment, such as incontinence and erectile dysfunction. However, these complications depend on how experienced the surgeon is that you are being treated by.
The USPSTF is made up of 16 volunteer members who are experts in prevention, evidence-based medicine, and primary care. Their fields of practice and expertise include behavioral health, family medicine, geriatrics, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, and nursing. However, no one on the USPSTF has actually treated patients with prostate cancer.
Prostate cancer mortality was on the decline before the USPSTF issued its recommendation. Since incorporating the PSA test, there has been a 40 percent reduction in prostate cancer mortality in the United States.
The USPSTF also ignores how the PSA has actually been valuable and has helped the health care system. Prostate cancer mortality was on the decline before the USPSTF issued its recommendation. Since incorporating the PSA test, there has been a 40 percent reduction in prostate cancer mortality in the United States.
Pros of PSA screening
Cons of PSA screening
What people should know about PSA screening
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/a-prostate-surgeons-warning-federal-guidelines-for-psa-test-put-men-in-danger