The majority of prostate cancers occur in men after the age of 50, and the older the age, the greater the incidence. The incidence of prostate cancer in China has increased by 10% every year in the past 10 years, which is the largest increase in the world. The 50s and 60s of the last century were the peak of population births in China, and men born in those years are now entering or about to enter the peak age of prostate cancer incidence, so it is expected that the next 10-20 years will be a time of dramatic increase in prostate cancer patients in China. The current situation of prostate cancer in China is that 60% of prostate cancer patients who come to the hospital are already advanced cases (5% in the United States and developed countries in Europe), losing the chance of radical treatment and requiring lifelong comprehensive treatment based on endocrine therapy (costing about 80-100,000 per year). Only 40% of prostate cancer patients belong to early stage and can apply radical treatment. Radical treatment, including radical surgery, radical radiotherapy and radical cryotherapy, is the most effective, least side effects, shortest time and least costly way to treat prostate cancer, with a total cost of about $50,000-$100,000. According to the current incidence rate of prostate cancer in China, the aging status of the population, and the composition ratio of early and late stage prostate cancer, the national health insurance, the economic status of the country and families, and the service capacity of the medical industry, prostate cancer will become a very serious social, family and medical problem in China, if we do not start taking measures to reverse this situation now, in 10-20 years prostate cancer will If we don’t start taking steps to reverse this situation now, prostate cancer will seriously affect the health, lives and wealth of our men in 10-20 years. How can we change the current situation? The only practical thing at the moment is to strengthen health promotion and education, and for men to have an annual medical check-up with prostate cancer after the age of 50, especially for those at high risk with a family history of prostate cancer, for early detection and treatment. The most recent example is the Prime Minister of Singapore, who was found to have very early stage prostate cancer during his physical examination and underwent radical lumpectomy for prostate cancer, with a cure rate of more than 95 percent.