by Richard Ablin (Find this book)
Every year, more than a million men undergo painful needle biopsies
for prostate cancer, and upward of 100,000 have radical prostatectomies,
resulting in incontinence and impotence. But the shocking fact is that
most of these men would never have died from this common form of cancer,
which frequently grows so slowly that it never even leaves the
prostate. How did we get to a point where so many unnecessary tests and
surgeries are being done? In The Great Prostate Hoax, Richard J.
Ablin exposes how a discovery he made in 1970, the prostate-specific
antigen (PSA), was co-opted by the pharmaceutical industry into a
multibillion-dollar business. He shows how his discovery of PSA was
never meant to be used for screening prostate cancer, and yet
nonetheless the test was patented and eventurally approved by the FDA in
1994. Now, doctors and victims are beginning to speak out about the
harm of the test, and beginning to search for a true prostate
cancer-specific marker. -- Publisher Marketing