How Biden cancer diagnosis could have gone undetected

How Biden cancer diagnosis could have gone undetected
US President Joe Biden addresses the nation from the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC. (File/AFP)
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Updated 19 May 2025

How Biden cancer diagnosis could have gone undetected

How Biden cancer diagnosis could have gone undetected
  • Republicans shared conspiratorial posts to the effect that Biden and his White House medical team had long concealed his illness for political purposes

WASHINGTON: Joe Biden’s diagnosis with an aggressive form of prostate cancer has spurred some prominent conservatives to accuse the former president of a cover-up, but oncologists told AFP that screening limitations could very well have left his condition undetected until now.
The 82-year-old received the diagnosis last week after he experienced urinary issues and a prostate nodule was found, his office said Sunday.
While President Donald Trump said he was “saddened” to learn of his rival’s condition, a chorus of Republicans led by Vice President JD Vance and Donald Trump Jr said or shared conspiratorial posts to the effect that Biden and his White House medical team had long concealed his illness for political purposes.
Questions over Biden’s health dogged him throughout the waning months of his presidency and his short-lived reelection campaign. And they have been renewed in recent weeks ahead of the expected release of a book detailing what it calls his declining physical condition.
Prostate cancer, the most common among men, is typically diagnosed much sooner than other kinds of cancer. It can be caught in its early stages using blood tests that measure for a protein called PSA.
Medical experts interviewed by AFP said the late identification of an advanced cancer would not be unheard of, even for a former president receiving top-of-the-line medical care.
“We can’t rule out the possibility that it was an aggressive form that developed quickly,” said Natacha Naoun, an oncologist with France’s Gustave-Roussy Institute.
Annual PSA screening after the age of 70 is not universally recommended.
The US Preventive Services Task Force advises against it, reasoning that the risk of false positives and the harms from biopsies and treatment outweigh the benefits.
“It could be they decided to stop checking PSA annually, and then he had urinary symptoms,” said Russell Pachynski, an oncologist with Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, who told AFP that prostate cancer patients do not always experience telltale pains or signs.
It is also possible that Biden was undergoing routine screenings, but that those checks failed to turn up indications of cancer, Pachynski said.
“Maybe it was just unlucky that his particular cancer didn’t express a lot of PSA and he still had a normal PSA. In that setting, you would not go checking the prostate or do a biopsy, etcetera, unless it was driven by symptoms.”
Otis Brawley, an oncologist and epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, said studies have shown both PSA testing and rectal exams are imperfect.
“It is not unusual for a man to be diagnosed with metastatic prostate disease despite normal annual screening,” he told AFP. “This is part of the limitations of prostate screening.”


Four Nigerian security personnel killed in militant ambush

Four Nigerian security personnel killed in militant ambush
Updated 5 sec ago

Four Nigerian security personnel killed in militant ambush

Four Nigerian security personnel killed in militant ambush
  • The incident is the latest in dozens of attacks targeting Nigerian security forces by DaeshWAP
  • "We lost two soldiers and two members of the Civilian CJTF (militia) in the ambush by DaeshWAP terrorists," a military officer told AFP

KANO: Militants aligned with the Daesh group ambushed Nigerian security forces in northeastern Borno state, killing two soldiers and two anti-militant militia members, sources said Saturday.
Fighters from Daesh-West Africa Province (DaeshWAP) opened fire Friday with heavy guns on a motorcycle convoy of Nigerian troops, anti-militant militia and local hunters on patrol in Damboa district, according to a military source and a security report.
The incident is the latest in dozens of attacks targeting Nigerian security forces by DaeshWAP, which has recently intensified raids on military bases with rocket-propelled grenades and suicide drones.
"We lost two soldiers and two members of the Civilian CJTF (militia) in the ambush by DaeshWAP terrorists," a military officer told AFP.
"The terrorists laid ambush on the patrol convoy of motorcycles led by the brigade commander, which resulted in exchange of fire," said the officer, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorised to speak on the incident.
A United Nations situation report shared among aid agencies in the region and seen by AFP confirmed the killing of two soldiers and two anti-militant militia members in the ambush, while 17 motorcycles were seized by the militants.
According to the report, several soldiers, including the military commander, were missing, but the commander returned to base in the town of Damboa, 90 kilometres (55 miles) from the regional capital, Maiduguri.
The attack underlines the threat DaeshWAP poses in the region despite being locked in internecine infighting with rival militant group Boko Haram for control in areas around Lake Chad.
DaeshWAP split from Boko Haram in 2016 due to ideological differences and rose to become a dominant group in the region.
The group has been under pressure from Boko Haram, which has pushed it from most of the islands in Lake Chad under its control.
On Sunday, Boko Haram killed around 200 DaeshWAP fighters in an ambush on the shores of the lake, according to intelligence and anti-militant militia sources.
The militant violence has killed more than 40,000 people and displaced around two million in the northeast since it erupted in 2019.
The conflict has spilled into neighbouring Niger, Cameroon and Chad, leading the region to launch a military coalition to fight the militant groups.