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Warning thousands of Black men will die of prostate cancer in next decade without targeted screening


More than 2,000 Black men will die from prostate cancer in the next 10 years if the UK doesn’t change its screening programme, new figures reveal.

Around 1 in 4 Black men in the UK will be diagnosed with the disease – twice the rate of white men. The reasons for the disparities vary, but contributing factors include genetics, a lack of awareness, delays in seeking help and barriers to accessing diagnostic tests.

Last month, the government’s National Screening Committee (NSC) rejected proposals for a targeted prostate cancer screening programme for high-risk men, which includes Black men and those with a family history of cancer, because it said the harms of widespread testing outweigh the benefits and also cited a lack of available data on Black patients.

Now, new estimates from the charity Prostate Cancer UK, shared with The Independent, suggest that if nothing changes, more than 2,300 Black men will die over the next decade, and at least 16,000 men will be diagnosed, if current rates of the disease continue.

Amy Rylance, director of health services, equity and improvement at Prostate Cancer UK, said: "We were bitterly disappointed by the UK NSC's announcement that the evidence isn't yet strong enough to recommend targeted screening for Black men.

“While we accept the committee's decision that the data they reviewed had too many gaps, a significant opportunity has been missed. The NHS holds electronic health data that could fill these gaps – but nobody has made full use of these records, and they weren't reviewed by the committee."

She said that the charity would work alongside the NSC to find the missing data and build the evidence base needed to secure screening for Black men.

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Source: The Independent, 6 April 2026

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