PSA at 6 months after salvage RT—not so good
I underwent salvage RT last year (38 sessions of IMRT, Sept-Nov). My usPSA going into RT was 0.094 but I had a palpable nodule in my prostatic fossa that was intensely active on a PSMA PET scan (max SUV of 13.3). Initial alarm bells for a recurrence went off in June of last when a normal PSA test came back at 0.11. That was the first time my PSA was detectable (0.1 or higher) since a RARP in 2015.
At 3 months after salvage RT, my usPSA was 0.086. Both my RO and urologist considered that a good start.
Just had my 6-month usPSA test, which can back at 0.113. Not the right direction.
To make matters more concerning, routine bloodwork last week showed that my alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is high (150). Labcorp considers 47-123 to be normal. My Vitamin D (also tested) is normal and I have no markers for liver disease. So, those are not likely the reason for the high ALP.
Best case scenario: high ALP could be nothing (1 in 20 people have it without any disease). Bump in PSA could be ephemeral.
Worst case scenario: high ALP is an early indicator of bone mets, along with the bump in my PSA.
Am scheduled to see my RO next Thursday.
Not drawing any conclusions quite yet, but these are concerning results.
I expect that at minimum, I will be facing more testing this year.
Any thoughts, similar results/experience?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Connect

@melvinw
What you’re seeing is not unusual after having radiation. I know some people that have waited three years before their PSA hit the rock bottom point. You are doing just fine and .1 may be your bottom. After radiation, they do not consider doing anything until it hits two points above the bottom, which would be 2.1.
I know many other people whose PSA never became undetectable after having radiation. It does reach a low point and stays there.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
4 Reactions@jeffmarc Thanks Jeff. With this most recent value of 0.100, I am certainly leaning toward what you have suggested.
I guess the odd thing to me is that my PSA is essentially the same before and after radiation. Not what I expected to happen, but then dealing with all things cancer is a constant learning curve. My expectations are constantly being educated.
One thing I’ve learned in the past year is that eradication of prostate cancer once it is outside the prostate is a difficult goal, but keeping it in check is often achievable. You learn to live with it, and aim to stay one step ahead of it. You work to accept it as part of your life, without making it your entire life—yet another moving target.
If my PSA just wiggles around 0.1 forever, then I am fine with that.
Thanks for all your insights!
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@melvinw Test, retest, and test again. It’s all you can do until you either see a definite change in PSA value or a velocity upward which would be a real indicator of cancerous cells dividing. Other than that, patience is your best bet!
Phil
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
3 Reactions@heavyphil Yup, and I’m going to push for testing ALP along with PSA as well given that it has been rising over the the past couple of years and is well out of range.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions