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New Blood Test Promises Smarter Prostate Cancer Screening
12 Jan
Summary
- A new blood test may more accurately diagnose prostate cancer.
- It aims to distinguish cancer presence, aggressiveness, and treatment need.
- This could lead to a national screening program for the common cancer.

Researchers at the University of Cambridge are developing a new blood test to significantly improve prostate cancer diagnosis. The test analyzes DNA methylation markers shed by cancer cells, offering greater accuracy in determining cancer presence and aggressiveness compared to current PSA tests. This advancement holds the potential to establish a much-needed national screening program in the UK for prostate cancer, the most prevalent cancer among men and the cause of 12,000 annual deaths.
The existing PSA screening method has faced criticism for its unreliability, as it can miss aggressive cancers and lead to unnecessary stress and treatments due to false positives. The new test, however, examines thousands of signals simultaneously, overcoming previous challenges in detecting these subtle markers. Early results are highly promising, with clinical trials anticipated within 18 to 24 months.




