BLOGGERS: MARK SCHOLZ, MD & RALPH H. BLUM

The co-authors of Invasion of the Prostate Snatchers, blog alternate posts weekly. We invite you to post your comments.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Making Friends with Your PSA

BY RALPH BLUM

It’s a simple enough blood test. So who’s afraid of a PSA? The straight answer? Every guy who’s ever been told his PSA was elevated for his age, and that he needs to have a biopsy. Because from that point on, things can happen fast. It’s the prostate cancer version of the old Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance double play: PSA Test to Biopsy to Surgery.

PSA is an acronym for prostate-specific antigen, a protein produced by normal prostate cells. Cancer cells, however, produce more PSA per unit volume than benign cells. Since 1986, PSA testing, although not perfect, has served as the gold standard for early diagnosis and—the area of most controversy—screening for prostate cancer.

While with the majority of younger men, early diagnosis far too often leads to unnecessary treatment and anxiety, urologists are justifiably concerned that, without PSA testing, they will miss diagnosing the less-common high-grade form. So, when in doubt, test.

So, I’m talking primarily to those of you with low-grade tumors, conditions that qualify as “chronic” and might better not even be called “cancer.” That doesn’t mean that being newly diagnosed with prostate cancer is any less of a shock. But there are things you can do to reduce the anxiety.

Bottom line, after all the millions spent and all the years of research, we still don’t have a foolproof diagnostic test for prostate cancer. So don’t panic if you get a high PSA reading. Here are some factors that can distort PSA test results in ways that don’t necessarily indicate cancer:

BPH: Benign prostatic hyperplasia, prostate enlargement caused by age or infection, can produce elevations in PSA not indicative of cancer. Check it out.

Infection: Consider the possibility of infection. When my PSA spiked unaccountably from 5 to 17, my wife, Jeanne, who practices Traditional Oriental Medicine, put me on a course of Cipro, and my PSA plummeted back to 6.5 within two weeks.

The 48 Hour Rule: Strenuous exercise, heavy lifting, sexual activity, even bicycle riding before a PSA test are all considered to negatively effect the result. So don’t do any of it before your PSA test.

Inconsistent Lab Work: Standardization between assays and labs is still lacking, making comparisons between PSA tests from different labs are unreliable. Make certain your urologist uses the same lab every time.

Then, there are those of you for whom PSA testing is a higher priority:

Family history: If you have a family history of prostate cancer, it’s advisable to begin PSA testing at 40 and repeat the test at six-month intervals.

African Americans: All African-Americans are advised to begin tests by age 40 regardless. The death rate from undiagnosed prostate cancer for African-Americans is currently twice that of Caucasian men. Partly for genetic reasons, partly from refusal to submit to the DRE, the finger-up-the-butt trick the rest of us, so to speak, take in our stride. Trust me, it’s over before you know it. 

Men Over 75: Nowadays, men over 75 are apt to be spared testing entirely. So avoid the anxiety, and have a good time? On the other hand, you might just go for the PSA test, and take the prostate cancer alert as a wake up call to get yourself a checkup.How long since your last physical, dude?

Finally, remember that the big decisions are all yours to make. So never hesitate to go for a second opinion—or a third. And if you don’t like the test results, get another PSA test done by a different lab. Or find a different urologist.

The best clinicians do not mindlessly screen all of their male patients. They decide which men should be tested based on age, symptoms, family history, expected longevity, general medical condition, physical examination findings, and—a significant factor—the patient's own request for the test. The goal of early detection remains to identify patients who have clinically significant cancers at a time when treatment is most likely to be effective.  

And here’s the really good news: 28 out of 30 men reading this blog, who do have prostate cancer, will die with it, not of it.  Regardless of its shortcomings, the PSA is still the most useful test that is widely available.

So if you’ve been avoiding it, have a PSA test done this week. And while you wait for results, instead of fretting, call the golf pro and get yourself a tee time for Saturday.


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