What to do if free prostate-specific antigen is high

The most likely reason for a high free prostate-specific antigen is that you have prostate cancer, and if you are diagnosed with prostate cancer, you need to have surgery in time, and if you don’t have prostate cancer, then you may have prostate hyperplasia or prostatitis, and you need to get treatment in time.

High free prostate-specific antigen refers to a test indicator that is not normal. This condition should first be determined to be abnormal and requires prompt and appropriate testing to confirm the diagnosis before treatment can be taken.

The first step is to undergo a rigorous examination to confirm if it is prostate cancer. The first thing you need to do to confirm the diagnosis is to have a local ultrasound of the prostate or an MRI of the prostate to see if it is abnormal. If it is abnormal, then you need to have a puncture of the prostate area to determine if it is prostate cancer or not, and if it is prostate cancer, you need to have immediate surgery. The actual fact is that if you are able to have surgery in the early stages, you will have a higher chance of being cured.

If, after a series of tests, it is determined that it is not prostate cancer, then a random test for free prostate-specific antigen is needed every three months, and if a problem is found, it indicates that prostatitis or prostate enlargement may be present, based on the exclusion of prostate cancer.