PAUL MONIZ: Doctor Salant, what about the role of heredity? If an uncle, a father, a brother, has had prostate cancer, does that make you more susceptible?
ROBERT SALANT, MD: There are certain known risk factors for developing prostate cancer, which would put a person in a higher-risk group. Number one, African-American men have a higher incidence of prostate cancer, as well as developing prostate cancer at a younger age.There's plenty of overlap between the white population and the African-American population, but, as a group, the cancer tends to be more virulent and also occurring at a younger age in the African-American population.
This is very important in terms of screening for prostate cancer and getting the message out to the African-American community. Certainly, by the age of 40, they should all be screened for prostate cancer.
In terms of heredity, if somebody has a father or an uncle who has had prostate cancer, they too are in a higher-risk group for prostate cancer, and must be extra-careful about screening for prostate cancer and have a rectal examination done at least once a year, starting at the age of 40, in addition to blood testing for prostate cancer.
PAUL MONIZ: So, it's crucial that they begin the process early.
ROBERT SALANT, MD: Absolutely.
PAUL MONIZ: Men would generally think that the higher their testosterone level is the more virile they are, the more of a man they are. But in this particular instance, it may not be so, in terms of it being healthy.