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      Variation in prostate-specific antigen screening in men aged 80 and older in fee-for-service Medicare.

      Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
      Age Factors, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Cost of Illness, Fee-for-Service Plans, statistics & numerical data, Health Care Costs, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Life Expectancy, Male, Mass Screening, adverse effects, methods, Medicare, Patient Selection, Physician's Practice Patterns, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Primary Health Care, Prostate-Specific Antigen, blood, Prostatic Neoplasms, diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, United States

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          Abstract

          To determine the rate of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening in men aged 80 and older in Medicare and to examine geographic variation in screening rates across the U.S. Retrospective cohort study of variation across hospital referral regions using administrative data. National random sample in fee-for-service Medicare. Medicare beneficiaries aged 80 and older in 2003. Percentage of men aged 80 and older screened using the PSA test. The national rate of PSA screening in men aged 80 and older was 17.2%, but there was wide variation across regions (<2-38%). Higher PSA screening in a region was positively associated with greater total costs (correlation coefficient (r)=0.49, P<.001), greater intensive care unit use at the end of life (r=0.46, P<.001), and greater number of unique physicians seen (r=0.36, P<.001). PSA screening was negatively associated with proportion of beneficiaries using a primary care physician as opposed to a medical subspecialist for the predominance of ambulatory care (r=-0.38, P<.001). PSA screening in men aged 80 and older is common practice, although its frequency is highly variable across the United States. Its association with fragmented physician care and aggressive end-of-life care may reflect less reliance on primary care and consequent difficulty informing patients of the potential harms and low likelihood of benefit of this procedure.

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