60 yr old psa increased from 2 to 3.97 in 1 yr, what should i request
very concerned, i want to be very informed please share TY
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
very concerned, i want to be very informed please share TY
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Mine went from 2.8 to 4.4 in a year but PCP wanted to wait. Next year, 5.5 and off to urologist. I missed by a year. Digital exam twice found nothing; MRI was unclear. Biopsy confirmed lesions in prostate, PSMA PET scan found metastases to lymph nodes. Don’t wait. As others commented, the jump up in PSA is the trigger for testing.
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3 ReactionsSimilar story here. My PSA jumped from 2.53 to 3.90 in 1 year. Urologist ordered an MRI, which resulted in a PI RADS lesion of 4. I then got a Biopsy, which resulted in 5 sampled cores with Gleasons 6, 7 and 8.
Just last week I got my PET-PSMA scan, which fortunately shows no expansion outside the prostate capsule.
I am now scheduled for RALP in a few weeks from now.
Don't wait, go to your urologist and go through all the required tests to find out what's going on, to get treatment right away, if required.
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1 ReactionSorry I was saying psa 120 not 1.2 and 238 and not 2.38 mri report looks like has gone into nurovascular bundle with bulging in bladder
No just urologist.
Im an retired nurse and I know that psa should be well below 10 not in hundreds like mine i just trying to grasp all bad reports getting
Thank you everyone I appreciate input very much
The first question out of my urologist mouth was why didn't you come to me months ago instead of letting psa be sky high..
I completely agree with you, retiredguy. My personal narrative mirrors yours very closely. I had my MRI fusion intrarectal biopsy this morning. Both procedures (MRI and biopsy) were easy, then again, I am not queasy or claustrophobic. Besides, my urologist is amazing, and I respect and trust him. The radiologist explained that he could not discern if the sole lesion was PI-RADS 3 or 4; my urologist said that he would call it a PI-RADS 3. Now, I wait for the pathology report -- and go from there. Stay strong, everyone!
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