A. It is a gland located in the lower urinary tract, under the bladder and around the urethra and is exclusive to males. It produces the fluid which carries semen. A healthy prostate is about the size of a large walnut and has a volume of 15-25 millilitres (ml). The prostate slowly grows as men grow older.
A. Prostate cancer is a malignant tumour in the prostate. The risk of getting prostate cancer increases with age. The average age for diagnosis of prostate cancer is 69.
However, most prostate cancers develop slowly and do not cause symptoms. Fast-growing prostate cancer is less common.
In the present era, with advancement in diagnostic tools, widespread use of PSA screening and longer life expectancy, more and more prostate cancers are being detected.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men, with high survival rate.
A. The PSA test is a blood test that measures the level of prostate specific antigen (PSA) in your blood. Prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, is a protein produced by the prostate gland that is present in the male’s blood. Depending on your age and the health of your prostate, PSA levels rise when there is a benign enlargement of the prostate, or an infection of the prostate, also known as prostatitis, or prostate cancer.
Although the PSA test is often done to detect cancer in men who have problems passing urine and is also used to help in the treatment of men who are known to have prostate cancer, it can also detect early prostate cancer before it causes symptoms or any abnormality of the prostate.
Although using the PSA test in this way to screen for prostate cancer is sometimes recommended, some doctors do not think it is necessarily a good thing because it may detect very small cancers that pose no risk to your health.
A raised level may mean you have prostate cancer. About two out of three men with a raised PSA level will not have prostate cancer. The higher the levels of PSA, the more likely it is to be a sign of cancer. The PSA test can also miss cancer.
However, other conditions which are not cancerous (for example, benign enlargement of the prostate, prostatitis, and urinary infection) can also cause higher PSA levels in the blood.
When you have a PSA test, you should not have:
A. There are usually three main options after a PSA test:
Complications can follow this test – bleeding can occur or infection in the urine, the prostate or the blood.
Even if the biopsy test is negative, this does not necessarily completely rule out prostate cancer.
Usually, it will be necessary to have the PSA test repeated, and sometimes further biopsies are needed. It is important to realise that, if your PSA is raised, even if you do not have cancer, it can be very difficult to rule out cancer and you may need to go on having tests for some time.
A. You may be asking for a test because a relative has had prostate cancer. Prostate cancer can run in families, but it is only if it is a close relative (eg father or brother), or, especially, two or more close relatives, that the increased risk is important. This is particularly so if they have developed the disease at a young age.
A.