Extract

Meet Prosty the Spokesgland. The plucky prostate recently debuted on Capitol Hill, starring in a television advertisement designed to rally support for research into effective imaging tests for prostate cancer.

“Women have the mammogram,” said Faina Shtern, M.D., president and chief executive officer of the nonprofit AdMeTech Foundation, which organized the October press event. “Men want to know, ‘Where is our man-o-gram?’”

Last year AdMeTech, which Shtern founded in 2000, decided to focus on drawing philanthropy and government funding dedicated to prostate cancer imaging research. The foundation received Department of Defense grants in 2000 and 2002, which it used to fund research into molecular tags that could highlight incipient prostate tumors.

“We want to convince Congress that funding in this area is vital,” said Shtern, the former chief of the diagnostic imaging research branch at the National Cancer Institute.

The Prosty campaign personifies the problem as Shtern and her coalition see it. After the gland gets poked by a gloved finger and pierced by biopsy needles, he spins around and points to a throbbing red pustule on his backside. “Hey, you missed a cancer!” he protests.

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