Veteran Hollywood actor Ben Stiller revealed on Tuesday that he survived a battle against “mid-range aggressive” prostate cancer in 2014.
Sharing the news in a blog post titled “The Prostate Cancer Test That Saved My Life” on Medium, the Zoolander star began, “My urologist segued from talking about how inconvenient it was picking his daughter up at school that morning to dropping a cancer diagnosis on me without missing a beat. Two weeks earlier, I didn’t even have an urologist.”
Ben Stiller in his iconic Zoolander role. Source: Ben Stiller / Facebook.
Now cancer free for two years, the 50-year-old said he decided to share the news in a bid not just to encourage more men to be tested early for prostate cancer, but also to defend the controversial PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen) test, which Stiller says saved his life.
"The bottom line for me: I was lucky enough to have a doctor who gave me what they call a “baseline” PSA test when I was about 46. I have no history of prostate cancer in my family and I am not in the high-risk group, being neither — to the best of my knowledge — of African or Scandinavian ancestry. I had no symptoms," Stiller explained.
"What I had — and I’m healthy today because of it — was a thoughtful internist who felt like I was around the age to start checking my PSA level, and discussed it with me."
According to Stiller, there is controversy around the "painless blood test" because results are dependent on how doctors interpret the data and the recommendations that follow.