New paper below.
A great curiosity to me has been the lack of evidence of PCa as a significant historical issue - indeed, of it being any sort of issue - in spite of the prostate being long recognized as the bane of the aging male. The literature on problems of the prostate is quite rich. But doctors describing diseased prostates were describing BPH - not PCa.
With Google Books, one can read textbooks written be eminent urologists in the 1800s & find very few references to cancer. Sometimes, there is an outright denial that the cancer even occurs. In a couple of instances, authors report anecdotal cases related by other urologists. By the 1890s, PCa is beginning to be described, but certainly not as a common condition. By the 1990s it is said that every man would die with it if he lived long enough.
PCa is distinctive in that it often progresses to osteoblastic (rather than osteolytic) lesions. Such lesions are rarely seen in ancient bones, which makes an instance worthy of a paper in the International Journal of Paleopathology. How many PCa doctors will see it?
"There is great interest in the history and occurrence of human cancer in antiquity and particularly in ancient Egyptian populations. Despite the number of Egyptian mummies and skeletons studied through various means, evidence of primary or metastatic cancer lesions is rare. The Digital Radiography and Multi Detector Computerized Tomography (MDCT) scans of a male Ptolemaic Egyptian mummy, from the Museu Nacional de Arqueologia (MNA) in Lisbon displayed several focal dense bone lesions located mainly on the spine, pelvis and proximal extremities. The exceptional detail of the MDCT images allowed the proposed diagnosis of osteoblastic metastatic disease, with the prostate being the main hypothesis of origin. These radiologic findings in a wrapped mummy, to the best of our knowledge, have never previously been documented, and could be one of the oldest evidence of this disease, as well as being the cause of death."
I read this as, not that PCa has always been with us, but that it was never remotely as common as it became in the 20th century.
...
Some might say that ancient men died young, & many did of course, but enough men reached an age where BPH became a problem. An inability to urinate tends to grab the attention.
-Patrick
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/295...
Int J Paleopathol. 2011 Oct;1(2):98-103. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2011.09.002. Epub 2011 Oct 2.
Prostate metastatic bone cancer in an Egyptian Ptolemaic mummy, a proposed radiological diagnosis.
Prates C1, Sousa S1, Oliveira C1, Ikram S2.
Author information
1
IMI, Imagens Médicas Integradas, Av. da República 99 B, 1050-190 Lisbon, Portugal.
2
The American University in Cairo, 113 Kasr El Aini Street, P.O. Box 2511, Cairo 11511, Egypt.
Abstract
There is great interest in the history and occurrence of human cancer in antiquity and particularly in ancient Egyptian populations. Despite the number of Egyptian mummies and skeletons studied through various means, evidence of primary or metastatic cancer lesions is rare. The Digital Radiography and Multi Detector Computerized Tomography (MDCT) scans of a male Ptolemaic Egyptian mummy, from the Museu Nacional de Arqueologia (MNA) in Lisbon displayed several focal dense bone lesions located mainly on the spine, pelvis and proximal extremities. The exceptional detail of the MDCT images allowed the proposed diagnosis of osteoblastic metastatic disease, with the prostate being the main hypothesis of origin. These radiologic findings in a wrapped mummy, to the best of our knowledge, have never previously been documented, and could be one of the oldest evidence of this disease, as well as being the cause of death.
PMID: 29539324 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2011.09.002