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Matt Cook's avatar

I never get screened and never will. Good article Doctor. The odds are against you when you get screened on a routine basis. You are asking for trouble and you often get it.

Some examples…

The premise of PSA tests is very flawed and so many men are getting needle biopsies that cause more harm than anything else.

Colonoscopies are pretty bad. Anytime you look at the cost versus benefits, you fail to see the benefits. Actually taking aspirin is much more beneficial than colonoscopies. The concept of colonoscopies was supposedly to cut out precancerous polyps but that hasn't proven to be useful.

What is reasonably okay would be getting one of the occult fecal blood tests and similar non-invasive tests if you really want to go that route at all. I personally just don't. I don't want to hear about it. Mostly I think that's a much better thing.

Obviously I don't speak for everybody. But I do not live in fear.

Some people want to get screened and they should get all the screening they want if they want to pay for it.

But you should really think thrice before you go for any kind of routine screening because chances are you're just going to end up further down the medical rat hole and it's going to hurt you.

Now I know a lot of people, as you write, who say, "Oh my gosh, they found this, they found that. If I hadn't gotten screened, they wouldn't have found it."

But you know what?

People die in accidents and sometimes they get a post-mortem autopsy, which is the best kind of autopsy to get if you're going to get one. And maybe 15% of the time they have a serious malignant tumor and they were never aware of it.

It's possible we get cancer frequently.

And if we're not aware of it, it just goes away. Yes, that's true. Cancer cells can revert to normal cells. Happens all the time. So I would rather not get cut up into pieces and go through the trauma of screening. And I never do it myself.

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Matt Duck's avatar

We're about to add another: fatty liver disease (now MASLD and MASH). The new drug, resmetirom, showed modest effectiveness (30% MASH resolution vs 10% placebo). But Hepatologists all are using a type of non-imaging ultrasound called Fibroscan to stage fibrosis (you have to be stage 2 or 3 fibrosis to get on resmetirom). This is a bad tool, especially in obese populations like the MASLD/MASH community. It constantly over-diagnoses. You can go to reddit and look up tons of posts for "freaked out Fibroscan" etc and hear the angst this is causing people. It's going to put a lot of healthy people on a $47,000 treatment. Then there's monitoring. Because a lot of resmetirom patients will be on GLP-1s too, they are losing fat. The Fibroscan result goes down as there is less subcutaneous fat to go through - which makes it look like liver fibrosis is resolving. These false treatment responses, coupled with overstaging, is going to cause a massive spending problem on this condition. And it all starts with screening....no one has ever dies from steatohepatitis - yet because of bad screening tools (owned by the doctors writing the scripts), we're going to cause a lot of patient anxiety and unnecessary costs to our systems.

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