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Gentlemen, if you’re over age 45, it’s time again for your annual prostate screening. No, not that kind of screening.
More than one million American men may have been unnecessarily diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer since widespread use of the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test began in 1987, a new ...
Medical Device Network on MSN
Johns Hopkins researchers develop urine-based prostate cancer test
The test, supported partly by funding from the National Institutes of Health, leverages biomarkers found in urine to detect ...
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital, and four other institutions ...
There is no current national screening programme for prostate cancer; the committee that decides these things is looking into ...
Prostate cancer is highly treatable in early stages. Awareness of warning signs and timely PSA testing can save lives. Men ...
Richard Storey shares how, despite his dedication to peak physical fitness and healthy eating, he was diagnosed with prostate ...
"This is an all-hands-on-deck effort. It's a crisis with our community. It's a crisis across America. And men are dying ...
Primary care clinicians need to do a better job of informing Black men and other patients at high risk of dying from prostate ...
PSA tests measure the level of prostate-specific antigen in the blood and are commonly used by the NHS to detect prostate ...
Dr. Paul Gellhaus says PSA testing and modern biopsy methods ease fears and reassure patients, making early prostate cancer ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Primary care providers less likely to recommend PSA testing for Black men
Although Black men die of prostate cancer at twice the rate of the rest of U.S. males, this fact often is not known or ...
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