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Prostate cancer screening: Should you get a PSA test?

What's risky about a PSA test?

You may wonder how getting a test for prostate cancer could have a downside. After all, there's little risk involved in the test itself — it requires simply drawing blood for evaluation in a lab.

However, there are some potential downsides once the results are in. These include:

  • Elevated PSA levels can have other causes, such as benign prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia) or prostate infection (prostatitis). These false-positives are common.
  • Some prostate cancers may not produce much PSA. It's possible to have what's known as a "false-negative" — a test result that incorrectly indicates you don't have prostate cancer when you do.
  • Follow-up tests to check out the cause of an elevated PSA test can be invasive, stressful, expensive or time-consuming.
  • Living with a slow-growing prostate cancer that doesn't need treatment might cause stress and anxiety.

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