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Ben Stiller reveals he was diagnosed with prostate cancer

He was diagnosed with mid-range aggressive prostate cancer in 2014

Justin Carissimo
New York
,Olivia Blair
Tuesday 04 October 2016 10:01 EDT
(AP)

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Ben Stiller has revealed how he was diagnosed with prostate cancer two years ago after undergoing a "life-saving" routine test.

The Zoolander actor revealed he had the disease for the first time on Tuesday while appearing on The Howard Stern Show. He later published an essay he had written about his ordeal on Medium.

Stiller said the diagnosis of "mid-range aggressive" prostate cancer came "out of the blue" for him after he underwent a routine prostate-specific antigen test in June 2014.

“As my new, world-altering doctor spoke about cell cores and Gleason scores, probabilities of survival, incontinence and impotence, why surgery would be good and what kind would make the most sense, his voice literally faded out like every movie or TV show about a guy being told he had cancer… a classic Walter White movement, except I was me, and noone was filming anything at all,” he writes.

The 50-year-old was declared cancer-free three months later in September 2014 after undergoing a prostatectomy.

An "extremely grateful" Stiller has now decided to speak about his illness in order to encourage men to take the PSA test which he says "saved his life".

"Taking the PSA test saved my life. Literally. That's why I am writing this now [...] If [I] had waited, as the American Cancer Society recommends, until I was 50 I would not have known I had a growing tumour until two years after I got treated. If [I] had followed the US Preventative Services Task Force guidelines, I would have never gotten tested at all and not have known I had cancer until it was way too late to treat successfully."

Stiller said after telling his family, he told his friend and Meet The Parents co-star, actor Robert De Niro, who beat prostate cancer several years ago.

"The first thing I did when I got diagnosed was get on the internet to try to learn,” he said, “I saw De Niro had had it. I called him right away.”

Stiller says he appreciates the issue is a complicated one "but in this imperfect world, I believe the best way to determine a course of action for the most treatable, yet deadly cancer, is to detect it early".

Approximately 176,450 American men were diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2013 and 27,681 died from prostate cancer, according to the Center for Disease Control. Prostate cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among men of all races.

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