HEALTH REPORT - Vasectomy Study(在线收听

By Nancy Steinbach
HEALTH REPORT -July 17, 2002: Vasectomy Study

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

A major study has failed to find any link between a man having a vasectomy operation and developing prostate

cancer. A vasectomy is an operation in which a doctor cuts the tubes that carry a man’s sperm from the testes. It
is one of the most effective and widely used methods of birth control around the world. Experts say about five-
hundred-thousand men have vasectomies every year in the United States alone.

Doctors have been concerned for some time about a possible link between the operation and
the development of prostate cancer. Studies done in the past had conflicting results. Some
studies showed no link. But others said men who had vasectomies had an increased chance of
developing prostate cancer. Two studies were done in the United States in nineteen-ninetythree.
The studies said men with vasectomies had a sixty-six percent higher chance of
developing prostate cancer than men who did not have the operation.


But the new study says the operation does not increase the risk of cancer. The results were published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association.

It was carried out in New Zealand by researchers at the Dunedin (da-NEE-din) and Wellington Schools of
Medicine. New Zealand has extremely good reporting of cancer cases. And it has the highest rate of vasectomy in
the world. The New Zealand Herald newspaper reports that about forty percent of men ages forty to seventy years
old have had the operation.

The researchers spoke to more than two -thousand men. Almost half had recently developed prostate cancer. The
others did not have the disease. All the men were between the ages of forty and seventy-four.

The researchers asked them about their medical histories and those of family members. They also asked about
activities like smoking cigarettes and drinking alcohol. The researchers found no difference in the cancer rates
among the men who had vasectomies and those who did not have the operation. They also found no increased
chance of prostate cancer among men who had vasectomies twenty-five or more years earlier.

Other researchers say the New Zealand study is the best one done so far about vasectomy and prostate cancer.
They say it was large enough to have found any link that might exist.

This VOA Special English Health Report was written by Nancy Steinbach.


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