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National Screening Committee

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UK National Screening Committee position statement on surrogate outcomes in cancer screening trials

In this article (BMJ 2026;393:e629407; doi:10.1136/bmj-2026-629407) the first initial of D Gareth Evans was omitted. The online version has been corrected.

BMJ (British Medical Journal) 15d ago

Fewer men should get prostate cancer screening, committee recommends

An expert committee

The Guardian UK 14d ago

Most UK men should not be offered prostate cancer screening, experts say

Government will consider committee’s guidance that says mass screening ‘likely to cause more harm than good’Most men in the UK will not be offered prostate cancer screening if the government accepts the final recommendation of an expert committee.Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in the UK, with more than 64,000 men diagnosed every year. There is, however, no national screening programme for the disease. Continue reading...

The Guardian Health 14d ago

Why not screening for prostate cancer is justified

The debate on prostate cancer screening is life, the universe, and everything boiled down to one question — and the answer isn’t 42. Whether or not men should be routinely screened for prostate cancer seems simple enough to answer, but only on the face of it. As two position statements from the UK’s National Screening Committee show — one on multicancer detection tests (doi:10.1136/bmj-2026-089868),1 the other on surrogate outcomes (doi:10.1136/bmj-2026-629407)2 — screening decisions are...

BMJ (British Medical Journal) 4h ago

Thousands more UK black men to be invited for prostate cancer screening

Health secretary announces expansion of Transform trial but does not back population-wide testingThousands more black men will be invited to take part in a prostate cancer screening trial as the health secretary insisted he was “following the science” in not backing population-wide testing. James Murray accepted a recommendation from the UK national screening committee (UKNSC) that will result in only a few thousand high-risk men with a gene mutation being screened for the disease.

The Guardian Politics 8d ago

Thousands more UK black men to be invited for prostate cancer screening

Health secretary announces expansion of Transform trial but does not back population-wide testingThousands more black men will be invited to take part in a prostate cancer screening trial as the health secretary insisted he was “following the science” in not backing population-wide testing. James Murray accepted a recommendation from the UK national screening committee (UKNSC) that will result in only a few thousand high-risk men with a gene mutation being screened for the disease.

The Guardian World 8d ago

Thousands more UK black men to be invited for prostate cancer screening

Health secretary announces expansion of Transform trial but does not back population-wide testingThousands more black men will be invited to take part in a prostate cancer screening trial as the health secretary insisted he was “following the science” in not backing population-wide testing. James Murray accepted a recommendation from the UK national screening committee (UKNSC) that will result in only a few thousand high-risk men with a gene mutation being screened for the disease.

The Guardian Health 8d ago

Thousands more UK black men to be invited for prostate cancer screening

Health secretary announces expansion of Transform trial but does not back population-wide testingThousands more black men will be invited to take part in a prostate cancer screening trial as the health secretary insisted he was “following the science” in not backing population-wide testing. James Murray accepted a recommendation from the UK national screening committee (UKNSC) that will result in only a few thousand high-risk men with a gene mutation being screened for the disease.

The Guardian UK 8d ago

The right’s culture war over prostate cancer screening is damaging trust in medicine | Polly Toynbee

The decision not to test all men and only screen the most at risk, including black men, is fact-based. Yet it’s been called ‘two-tier’ – and labelled as misandryIf the country seems to be slipping away from reason and trust in science, blame usually falls on modern phenomena such as social media and its fantastical influencers. Or on the US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr’s bizarre anti-vaccine, anti-fluoride, anti-evidence lunacy.

The Guardian UK 6d ago