This group has been incredibly helpful for our entire family. We have a consultation coming up with the Dr. But wanted to tap into the collective expertise of the group as well.
Jul 15, 2020: Had RP. Histopathology report = pT2N0Mx
Aug 20, 2020: NLR = 7.5
Sep 7, 2020: First PSA post-op = 0.017
Oct 1, 2020: Second PSA = 0.028 and NLR = 9
Questions:
1. How should we read these PSA levels post-op? I’ve read mixed opinions about them. Anything below 0.2 is ok vs. 0.03 is ok so not sure which one to reliably consider
2. His NLR is also something that bothers us and it has gone up only after RP, pre-op it was 2 (within the <3.3 acceptable range)
Thanks for your guidance
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piousheart
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Hello! And thanks for your quick and expert guidance, always!
re: low post-op PSA, we were super happy to see the first low number but the tiny rise in the second one made us a little nervous. Does the small increase matter?
re: NLR - I'd read some posts here that high NLR might be early indicator for bCR?
What you are calling a small increase is within the error of the test. Tale the test 10 x and you will get 10 different results within the standard error. Stop the NLR nonsense - what does it give you but anxiety?
The max permissible error of the test is 20%, in accordance to its approval issued by the regulatory authority (FDA in the USA). Otherwise, they are not allowed to report 3 decimal figures and should revert to just 2.
Consequently, there is a small increase, but this should not worry you the least. Firstly, a sensible lower cut-off value is >0.06 and secondly it is the rate of rise and not the absolute value that rings the bells. If you want to monitor the latter, (rate of rise) monthly tests can give you an earlier and more reliable picture. You have missed the first test taken 4-6 weeks after the procedure. You would had got a better picture today if your dad had taken it. Think about it.
We had the first test done at 7 weeks and the next one roughly 4 weeks after. But I agree, it’s better to wait for some more tests to get a better idea. Hoping and praying the numbers continue to stay low 🙏
When you have your next PSA test you may send me the outcome and I will give you some feedback. I am a retired engineer and have lived with numbers all along my professional life.
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