Husband's elevated PSA level: What could it mean?

Posted by katebaker @katebaker, Apr 10 2:27pm

Hello, everyone. My husband, a few months ago, had a PSA of 6. His PCA prescribed antibiotics, which brought that number down to 4. He had a follow up appointment with a urologist today, scheduled a biopsy, and this doctor gave him a potential chance of cancer of 60/40%, and unfortunately, didn't seem supportive, or even explain other possibilities for his elevated PSA. I'm wondering if anyone has insight on this? My husband does not have a family history of prostrate cancer. Thank you, thank you!

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.

Profile picture for wheel1 @wheel1

Follow Jeff’s advice. I cannot imagine the urologist rushing straight into a biopsy after the PSA dropped from 6 to 4. At the minimum waiting 4 months for another PSA. Do you have a history of his PSA levels. Even if the PSA becomes a concern, The MpMRI of the prostate is standard of care before a biopsy today to see if any lesions can be identified for a MRI guided fusion biopsy of the lesions. A template guided random biopsy is old school before the advent of the MpMRI. His urologist may just not be up to date to where most urologist are. Now the MRI can help avoid a unnecessary biopsy at the time if nothing is seen with then continued monitoring of the PSA. One can as part of the decision if still in question about doing a biopsy after the MRI, one can take a non invasive urine marker test called ExoDx prostate test. This test analyzes for three RNA biomarkers to assess a person’s risk of having clinically significant prostate cancer. If the number came back low it would validate that the MRI did not see anything, while a higher number would push for more surveillance or a biopsy.

Jump to this post

@wheel1
Thought you might be interested in this table. The ExoDx Is only 50% accurate according to this table. While the PSE test is accurate to 94%. It’s a blood test so pretty simple to get a sample.

REPLY
Profile picture for Jeff Marchi @jeffmarc

@wheel1
Thought you might be interested in this table. The ExoDx Is only 50% accurate according to this table. While the PSE test is accurate to 94%. It’s a blood test so pretty simple to get a sample.

Jump to this post

@jeffmarc
Another example how quick technology is changing. I wish this had been more common a few years ago. I like anything non invasive, although after the prostatectomy I guess invasive shouldn’t matter anymore

REPLY
Profile picture for wheel1 @wheel1

@jeffmarc
Another example how quick technology is changing. I wish this had been more common a few years ago. I like anything non invasive, although after the prostatectomy I guess invasive shouldn’t matter anymore

Jump to this post

@wheel1
Considering that I get a blood test every month For the last eight years, that never does seem invasive. After four reoccurrences my PSA Needs close tracking.

REPLY
Profile picture for Jeff Marchi @jeffmarc

@wheel1
Thought you might be interested in this table. The ExoDx Is only 50% accurate according to this table. While the PSE test is accurate to 94%. It’s a blood test so pretty simple to get a sample.

Jump to this post

@jeffmarc We are definitely going to request a PSE from my husband's PCP. From what I read on it, at 94% accurate, it provides a thorough picture. I am so grateful for your advice, Jeff, and am sorry you've had to endure 15 years of this!

REPLY
Profile picture for katebaker @katebaker

@kujhawk1978 Thank you so much, Kevin, and appreciate your words of advice. As we are, in very short time, learning more from you all about different diagnostics and care options, we are strengthened and feel much more equipped to entertain some second opinions while enlisting other medical professionals. This has been incredibly helpful!

Jump to this post

REPLY
Profile picture for Jeff Marchi @jeffmarc

@trtupper
Two good cancer care centers in Virginia are

VCU Massey
Comprehensive Cancer Center
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, Virginia
Comprehensive Cancer Center

University of Virginia Cancer Center
Charlottesville, Virginia
Comprehensive Cancer Center

Not sure either of those would work for you, but I thought I’d at least mention them. National Cancer Institute recommends them

Jump to this post

@jeffmarc Awesome Jeff!!! I will be making some call!!
Thank you so much!!

REPLY

@katebaker - just wanted to drop a quick note to say that I had my RP done at The James back in January, and have been there for two MRIs and one saturation biopsy previously, and that I have nothing but good things to say about the level of care I’ve received on every visit. They handle all my urologic/PCa needs now.

Good luck!

REPLY

Hello - There are many reasons why men can have prostate cancer. You're right, family history is a leading indicator. However, I do not have any and I just finished my last radiation therapy and androgen denial therapy a few days ago. I don't drink and smoke, either. My PSA rose from 0.4 in 2001 to 4.0 in 2020 then 5.9 in 2025. I did the MRI then biopsy that showed I had tumors in my prostate. My urologist told me I can wait and monitor it but I wanted to treat it as soon as possible because I was already 70 years old. You husband's case is surely different but the level being 4 is the highest normal for PSA. However, it did go up to 6 like you said and I'm wondering if you have previous results before that or did he have symptoms that prompted that PSA test? I would wait for the results of the biopsy because that would be really definitive. Hopefully, it's negative but if not, early treatment is the best option. I have known men who found out at stage 4. Good luck.

REPLY

It’s always best to get a second opinion. Especially with prostate issues. It could just be BPH. PSAs can fluctuate based on numerous reasons. I had mine checked every 4 months for 4 years. I swung from 4 to 9.7. Currently 8.6. One Urologist told me hurting my back can cause an elevated PSA. I recently read that ejaculating the day prior can cause a different reading. So if your comparing one month to the next you’re not comparing apples to apples unless all the “factors” are the same.

REPLY

Hi,
I would think an MRI would be in order to determine the size of his Prostate and if any suspicious areas show up before the biopsy is done. An enlarged Prostate will raise your PSA, even a PSA of 4 is high. A second opinion from another doctor/hospital might not be a bad idea.
Dave 3+4

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.