The Swedish Prostate Cancer Paradox
- Patrick C. Walsh, MD;
- James D. Brooks, MD
Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.
Excerpt
In this issue of THE JOURNAL, investigators from Sweden present their 15-year results of expectant management of prostate cancer.1 They conclude that localized prostate cancer has a favorable outlook following watchful waiting and that the number of deaths potentially avoidable by initial radical treatment is limited. These results sound encouraging and suggest that the aggressive approach to early diagnosis and therapy currently used by many physicians in the United States may constitute overtreatment. However, prostate cancer is far from being a benign disease in Sweden. Sweden has the fourth-highest age-adjusted mortality rate from prostate cancer in the world, 21% higher than the United States, which ranks 13th.2 This article thus presents a conundrum: if watchful waiting in localized disease results in few deaths, why is the overall mortality from prostate cancer in Sweden high?
See also p 467.
In the 223 cases of localized prostate cancer managed with
Footnotes
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Reprints: Patrick C. Walsh, MD, Department of Urology, Marburg 134, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21287-2101.








