Mobile Health Solutions for Prostate Cancer Diagnostics-A Systematic Review.

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Authors

Moghul, M
Cazzaniga, W
Croft, F
Kinsella, N
Cahill, D
James, ND

Document Type

Journal Article

Date

2023-07-28

Date Accepted

2023-07-13

Abstract

Prostate cancer, the most common cause of cancer in men in the UK and one of the most common around the world to date, has no consensus on screening. Multiple large-scale trials from around the world have produced conflicting outcomes in cancer-specific and overall mortality. A main part of the issue is the PSA test, which has a high degree of variability, making it challenging to set PSA thresholds, as well as limited specificity. Prostate cancer has a predisposition in men from black backgrounds, and outcomes are worse in men of lower socioeconomic groups. Mobile targeted case finding, focusing on high-risk groups, may be a solution to help those that most need it. The aim of this systematic review was to review the evidence for mobile testing for prostate cancer. A review of all mobile screening studies for prostate cancer was performed in accordance with the Cochrane guidelines and the PRISMA statement. Of the 629 unique studies screened, 6 were found to be eligible for the review. The studies dated from 1973 to 2017 and came from four different continents, with around 30,275 men being screened for prostate cancer. Detection rates varied from 0.6% in the earliest study to 8.2% in the latest study. The challenge of early diagnosis of potentially lethal prostate cancer remains an issue for developed and low- and middle-income countries alike. Although further studies are needed, mobile screening of a targeted population with streamlined investigation and referral pathways combined with raising awareness in those communities may help make the case for screening for prostate cancer.

Citation

Clinics and Practice, 2023, 13 (4), pp. 863 - 872

Source Title

Clinics and Practice

Publisher

MDPI

ISSN

2039-7275

eISSN

2039-7283
2039-7283

Research Team

Prostate & Bladder Cancer

Notes