A good friend has seen a slowly rising PSA over the last 4-5 years — here’s the most recent history:
May 2018 4.68
Dec 2018 6.04
Jan 2020 7.07
Aug 2020 7.20
Feb 2021 7.75
Oct 2021 7.85
Jul 2022 9.17
Since he’d been at a “normal” PSA 4 previously, it appears this has been rising since at least early 2018, probably up to about 10 by now. His urologist is recommending a biopsy.
It’s been a long time for me since being at a similar point, so I’m not familiar with today’s standard approach — but this seems to be a lethargic response from the urologist. If I understood him correctly, the DREs have shown nothing. So, this could explain the lack of action, and might suggest it’s not PCa…I’m hoping.
Regardless, I wanted to reach out to this group in the meantime. As I mentioned, he’s scheduled for a biopsy in the coming week. Based on advice in this and other forums, I’ve recommended he request a transperineal vs a TRUS, and request anesthesia if he feels he’d want that. I also wonder about first checking for BPH, prostatitis, etc before a biopsy, e.g. getting an mpMRI to help distinguish between prostatitis and PCa.
So, my specific questions:
What are your thoughts on the responsiveness of the urologist? Has this been a timely response, or has there been unnecessary delay?
Is an mpMRI a good idea? Are there any other scans he should get?
Is a biopsy now the right thing to do? Or, alternately, do some scans first, perhaps try a course of Cipro in case it’s bacterial prostatitis, … etc?
How else can he test for something other than PCa before proceeding with biopsy?
What other steps would you suggest?
Finally I’ll be advising him to move on to an oncologist if he in fact has PCa, and perhaps to change to a different urologist in either event — depending on feedback from this group.
Your thoughts are very kindly appreciated — many thanks in advance.