Health

More than 100 MPs urge Streeting to approve prostate cancer screening

Rishi Sunak hands health secretary open letter calling for testing for men at the highest risk

More than 100 MPs urge Streeting to approve prostate cancer screening

More than 100 MPs, including Rishi Sunak, have urged Wes Streeting to introduce screening for prostate cancer. The UK National Screening Committee, a government agency that advises ministers and the NHS about all aspects of screening, will recommend whether men at higher risk of the disease should be offered checks. It is due to write to the health secretary later this week, the Telegraph reported. Sunak, who is leading a cross-party alliance of 125 MPs, met Streeting on Monday evening to hand him an open letter urging the government to introduce tests so men at the highest risk, including Black men, men with a family history of prostate, breast or ovarian cancer, and those carrying the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, are “no longer left behind”. Related: David Cameron reveals prostate cancer diagnosis and calls for targeted screening The letter says: “Our current opportunistic PSA [prostate-specific antigen] testing system is unstructured, inefficient and unfair – a postcode lottery where some men succeed because they know to ask or can pay privately, while others are turned away despite repeated requests. “Yet the data hide what cannot be modelled: eroded trust among communities who feel abandoned. Black men, already at higher risk, often believe the system fails them. Families bear devastating emotional and financial burdens from late-stage disease – costs absent from formal modelling but among the most compelling reasons to act. “We now have the tools to deliver screening safely and effectively, yet the system is frozen waiting for next-generation trial data. “Waiting would entrench inequality and allow preventable deaths. Evidence is strong enough to act now. Perfection must not be the enemy of progress.” The push comes a day after David Cameron disclosed he was treated for prostate cancer. He called for a targeted screening programme. Cameron, 59, told the Times: “You always hope for the best. You have a high PSA score – that’s probably nothing. “You have an MRI scan with a few black marks on it. You think, ‘Ah, that’s probably OK.’ But when the biopsy comes back, and it says you have got prostate cancer. “You always dread hearing those words. And then literally as they’re coming out of the doctor’s mouth you’re thinking: ‘Oh, no, he’s going to say it. He’s going to say it. Oh God, he said it.’” Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in males in the UK, with about 55,000 new cases every year. There is no screening programme for the form of the disease in the UK because of concerns about the accuracy of PSA tests. A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine last month suggested prostate cancer screening could reduce deaths by 13%. Researchers found that one death from prostate cancer was prevented for every 456 men who were invited for screening and that one death from prostate cancer was averted for every 12 men in whom prostate cancer was diagnosed.

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