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October 10, 2011
from
PreventDisease Website
Deutsch
version
Studies confirm what the complementary health communities have been
stating for decades. Breast and prostate cancer screenings result in
an increase in breast and prostate cancer mortality respectively and
fail to address prevention.
In a Swedish study of 60,000 women, 70 percent of the
mammographically detected tumors weren't tumors at all.
These "false
positives" aren't just financial and emotional strains, they may
also lead to many unnecessary and invasive biopsies. In fact, 70 to
80 percent of all positive mammograms do not, upon biopsy, show any
presence of cancer.
When it comes to prostate cancer, a 20-year study from Sweden
suggests that screening for prostate cancer does not reduce the risk
of death from the disease.
In fact, many men
receive false-positive results and overtreatment, adding an element
of risk to wide-scale screening, researchers report in the March 31
online issue of
the BMJ.
“In the light of our
findings, I would say that the benefit from screening is not
sufficient to support mass screening,” said study author Dr.
Gabriel Sandblom, an associate professor at the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm.
In 2009, a firestorm of
controversy erupted when a top official with the American Cancer
Society let slip that the benefits of breast cancer and prostate
cancer screening may have been oversold.
The epicenter of the controversy was Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical
officer of the ACS.
Brawley who made a statement in an interview
with the New York Times about a Journal of the American Medical
Association analysis of breast and prostate cancer screening, which
raised questions about claims that screening saves lives.
How Breast and
Prostate Screenings Cause Cancer
PSA stands for Prostate-specific antigen test (PSA test).
This test
analyzes the blood for PSA, a substance produced by the prostate
gland. If higher-than-normal levels of PSA are detected, the claim
is that cancer is present.
But virtually all expert public health panels do not recommend the
PSA test. A blood test that isn't accurate can fail to find disease
that's present, leading to false reassurance. It can also report
disease when it's not really there, leading to unnecessary use of
other tests (like biopsy) that are not so benign. Perhaps most
concerning, the PSA test frequently identifies something that
qualifies as cancer under a microscope but acts nothing like cancer
in real life.
That is to say, the large majority of PSA-discovered
"cancers" would never cause any problem whatsoever if they went
undetected. Finding something through screening invariably leads to
treating it through conventional means which cause cancer
themselves.
Most of the men so treated would have been just fine if they never
knew about the cancer. But when they're treated, the majority suffer
really life-affecting effects, such as impotence and/or
incontinence.
It is questionable whether screening mammograms or PSA tests can
even provide genuine "early diagnosis" as is frequently claimed.
Cancer can makes dozens of divisions during its life, and neither
mammograms or PSA tests can pick up a tumor until it is of a
sufficient size, usually around 20-30 such divisions.
So much for
early diagnosis!
Radiation exposure is known to cause genetic mutation in breast
cells and prostate cells.
It is also known to switch off the
tumor
suppressing gene. Now, new research from the
Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory in America (a US Government facility) has shown
that radiation both changes the environment around breast cells, and
increases the risks of mutation within them; a mutation that can be
passed on in cell division.
4 to 6 weeks after exposure to radiation at a level below that of a
screening mammogram, breast cells started to prematurely age. This
results in their inability to send certain chemical messages into
their immediate environment, which then filled with pre-cancerous
mutated cells also from the radiation.
Paul Yaswen, a cell biologist and breast cancer research specialist
with Berkeley Lab's Life Sciences Division says,
"our work shows that
radiation can change the microenvironment of breast cells, and this
in turn can allow the growth of abnormal cells with a long-lived
phenotype that have a much greater potential to be cancerous."
Yawsen stated that radiation specialists have been slow in
understanding these concepts.
"Many in the cancer research
community, especially radiobiologists, have been slow to acknowledge
and incorporate in their work the idea that cells in human tissues
are not independent entities, but are highly communicative with each
other and with their microenvironment."
Moreover, men and women undergoing routine breast and prostate
cancer screenings are not being warned of the risks, with many tests
which inevitably leads to overtreatment.
An additional concern is the increasing use of medicalizing
conditions as breast cancer and prostate cancer at younger and
younger ages.
Malicious recommendations from the
Society of Breast Imaging (SBI)
and the American College of Radiology (ACR) on breast cancer
screening suggested that breast cancer screening should begin at age
40 and earlier in high-risk patients.
The recommendations also
suggest further utilization of lethal medical imaging tools such as
mammography which has itself been found to cause cancer.
Published in the January issue of the Journal of the American
College of Radiology (JACR), the recommendations released by the SBI
and ACR state that the average patient should begin annual breast
cancer screening at age 40. They also target women in their 30s if
they are considered "high risk" as they stated.
No evidence has ever supported any recommendations made for regular
periodic screening and mammography at ANY AGE. Exposure to
mammograms today can lead to cancer much later in life.
As
ABC News
reported, Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the deputy chief medical officer of
the American Cancer Society, says,
"Radiation exposure from these
scans is not inconsequential and can lead to later cancers."
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