60 Yr Old - % free PSA 10%, free PSA 0.26, Total PSA 3.98 in March
60 Yr Old -
Concerning: free PSA 0.26 and % free PSA 10% -- this seems bad according to normal ranges.
Total PSA 3.98 in March 2026, retest in April Total PSA 2.6
2025 - PSA 2.06
My PCP does not seem concerned. Should I go to a Urologist, and what next steps/tests would be most beneficial?
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@charlesprestridge
4 years ago at 66 years if age my PSA doubled from 1 to 2. My PCP sent me to a large Urology clinic, DRE normal. I said there is blood (brown spots) in semen. He said not to worry. PSA went up to 2.8 and MRI was ordered, negative, nothing there. I offered to pay for biopsy and there it was Gleason 3/4 and a lesion estimated to be 20 % of the prostate so sometimes low PSA does not equal no PC in a small percentage of us. The Chief Urologist at UC Irvine (a COE) said that about 10% of us get significant cancer at low PSA and/or MRI invisible. The issue is we might get treated late as a result. For me the driving factor was family history of cancer and brown spots in semen.
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3 Reactions@beachflyer
Thanks for sharing.
Diagnosis is definitely putting multiple test results and pieces together, over time.
Knowing individual situations vary on both ends of “general ranges”, like PSA, Pirads, etc.
@charlesprestridge
Thank you. Did you have a free PSA test done?
My last total PSA was 2.6. My free PSA was 0.26 ng/ml with a % free PSA 10%.
@oinc2526
I have not done the PSA Free test.
Since I have a Pirads5 lesion along the capsule wall (no visible ECE on MRI’s, but possible and definitely against wall), decision was to have another biopsy to see if Gleason score was higher than original 3+3. Which it was 3+4 (4 cores) on 2nd biopsy.
Thanks.