Patterns of Prostate-Specific Antigen Testing and Prostate Biopsies During the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Kaufman H
  • Chen Z
  • Niles J
  • et al.
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Abstract

PURPOSE This study examined changes in prostate disease screening (prostatic-specific antigen [PSA] testing), prostate biopsy testing, and prostate cancer diagnoses during the COVID-19 pandemic through December 2020. MATERIALS AND METHODS This analysis included test results from men ≥ 40 years, without prior International Classification of Diseases-10 record of prostate cancer since RESULTS Meeting inclusion criteria were 16,365,833 PSA and 48,819 prostate biopsy results. The average monthly number of PSA tests declined from 465,187 prepandemic to 295,786 early-pandemic (36.4% decrease; P = .01) before rebounding to 483,374 (3.9% increase; P = .23) late-pandemic. The monthly average number of PSA results ≥ 50 ng/mL (23,356; 0.14% of all PSA results) dipped from 659 prepandemic to 506 early-pandemic (23.2% decrease; P = .02) and rebounded to 674 late-pandemic (2.3% increase; P = .65). The average monthly number of prostate biopsy results decreased from 1,453 prepandemic to 903 early-pandemic (37.9% decrease; P = .01) before rebounding to 1,190 late-pandemic (18.1% decrease; P = .01). The average monthly number for Gleason score ≥ 8 (6,241; 12.8% of all prostate biopsies) declined from 182 prepandemic to 130 early-pandemic (28.6% decrease; P = .02) and decreased to 161 late-pandemic (11.5% decrease; P = .02). CONCLUSION The findings suggest that a substantial number of prostate screening opportunities and cancer diagnoses have been missed. Efforts are needed to bring such patients back for screening and diagnostic testing and to restore appropriate care for non-COVID-19-related medical conditions.

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APA

Kaufman, H. W., Chen, Z., Niles, J. K., Radcliff, J., & Fesko, Y. (2021). Patterns of Prostate-Specific Antigen Testing and Prostate Biopsies During the COVID-19 Pandemic. JCO Clinical Cancer Informatics, (5), 1028–1033. https://doi.org/10.1200/cci.21.00074

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