Prostate Health After 50: When to Get Checked and What the Results Really Mean

At some point, every man reaches an age where ignoring symptoms or “pushing through it” stops being a good plan. Recent research from Stanford suggests that the body ages in distinct waves — one in the mid-40s and another in the mid-60s — which is often when men start noticing changes they can’t dismiss as easily.

Those shifts make prostate health an important part of routine care. For most men, that conversation starts around age 50. For men of African or Caribbean ancestry, or those with a family history of prostate cancer, it begins earlier — often around 40-45.

Regardless of the exact age, the turning point is the same: you start taking your health seriously because staying well is easier than dealing with a problem too late. Prostate health is a key part of that picture. One in 8 men will develop prostate cancer, and roughly 1 in 4 will experience benign prostate enlargement (BPH) as they age.

Here’s what to expect, when to be checked, and how to interpret common test results.

When Should You Start Screening?

Screening isn’t the same as diagnosing cancer.

It’s about checking where you stand and spotting changes early, while they’re easier to manage.

General guidance

  • Average risk: Start discussing screening around age 50.
  • Higher risk: (African/Caribbean ancestry or first-degree relative with prostate cancer) Consider starting between 40–45.

Your doctor may adjust this based on symptoms, personal history, or previous test results.

What Screening Includes

Screening usually includes two simple steps that give a clear picture of your prostate health.

1. PSA Blood Test

PSA, or Prostate-Specific Antigen, is a protein made by the prostate. Higher levels can signal an issue, but often they don’t. PSA can rise because of:

  • benign prostate enlargement (BPH)
  • age
  • recent ejaculation
  • inflammation or infection
  • a long bike ride
  • recent prostate procedures

This is why a single PSA result rarely tells the whole story. Patterns over time matter more than one number.

2. Digital Rectal Exam (DRE)

A quick exam where your doctor checks the surface of the prostate for firmness, asymmetry, or irregularities. Paired with PSA, it helps give a fuller picture.

How to Understand PSA Results

Low or Normal for Your Age

This is the most common result. It usually means:

  • no immediate concern
  • follow-up every 1-2 years
  • earlier follow-up if you develop symptoms or have higher-risk factors

Mildly Elevated PSA

Common, and often not related to cancer.

Your doctor may recommend:

  • repeating the test
  • treating a possible infection
  • reviewing activities or medications that may affect PSA
  • imaging, if the number stays elevated or continues rising

PSA Free-to-Total Ratio

Your PSA has two forms in the blood: “free” PSA and “bound” PSA. The free-to-total ratio compares how much PSA is free versus how much is attached to proteins.

This test is only validated when the total PSA is between 4 and 10 ng/mL. In that range, a lower ratio can suggest the PSA rise needs closer investigation, while a higher ratio often points toward benign causes like BPH.

The ratio doesn’t diagnose cancer on its own, but it gives your doctor another piece of information when deciding whether an elevated PSA is more likely from enlargement, inflammation, or something that needs further assessment.

Rising PSA Over Time

Even if the number isn’t high, a steady increase can still signal that something is changing. A common rule of thumb is this: if your PSA rises by more than 20% over a year, it requires further assessment, even if the number is still in the “normal” range.

When that happens, men are often referred for:

  • MRI, which provides detailed imaging
  • additional blood or urine tests
  • a biopsy, if the MRI or overall picture suggests it’s appropriate

PSA Density

PSA density compares your PSA level to the size of your prostate.

A larger prostate naturally makes more PSA, which means a PSA that looks “high” may actually be normal for you.

Prostate size can only be measured by ultrasound or MRI, not by a DRE.

Very High PSA

A very high PSA requires further investigation, but it still doesn’t automatically mean cancer. It simply means that more information is needed to understand what’s going on.

When MRI Becomes Important

Not all centres use the same type of prostate MRI.

At University Urology Associates, we rely on multiparametric MRI, which provides a more detailed look at the prostate than standard imaging.

An mpMRI can help identify:

  • suspicious or abnormal areas
  • the size and shape of the prostate
  • signs of inflammation or infection
  • whether a biopsy is recommended

It helps avoid unnecessary procedures and offers clearer answers early on.

If You Need a Biopsy

Not every elevated PSA leads to a biopsy. If your doctor recommends one, they’ll explain why and walk you through the steps.

Most centres take biopsy samples through the rectum. At University Urology Associates, the approach is different. We use a transrectal ultrasound probe for guidance, but the biopsy needles are inserted through the perineum. The perineum is the space between the rectum and the base of the scrotum, so the needles do not go through the rectum or through the scrotum.

This technique reduces infection risk and allows your urologist to target specific areas more accurately.

Why This Matters

Prostate screening doesn’t have to feel complicated.

Getting checked after 50 – or earlier if you’re at higher risk – is a straightforward way to protect your long-term health.

Most men find that:

  • their PSA is normal,
  • or the result simply needs monitoring,
  • or, if something needs attention, it’s treatable easier when detected early

If you’d like to know whether a biopsy is appropriate for you based on your PSA and other factors, you can start with our pre-screening form. Our team will review your information and guide you toward the right next step.

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Location

123 Edward Street, Suite 1401
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1E2 Canada

Fax: +1 (416) 979-9002

University Urology Associates (UUA) provides advanced, minimally invasive treatment options for prostate cancer, BPH, and other urologic conditions. We offer specialized procedures like NanoKnife (IRE) and focal therapies designed to treat prostate cancer effectively while helping preserve quality of life. Our team of Toronto-based urologists includes University of Toronto-trained surgeons who continue to lead in hospital-based care and teaching. We treat patients from across the GTA, Canada, and beyond.

The reviews and testimonials shared on this website reflect individual patient experiences. Results may vary, and no specific outcome is guaranteed. These stories are meant to offer insight, not replace professional medical advice. To explore your options, we invite you to book a consultation with one of our urologists.

© 2025 University Urology Associates. All rights reserved.

PSA Test Explained: Understanding the Prostate-Specific Antigen Test

“Your PSA test is back and it’s high.” That phrase can sound like a verdict. But on its own, it’s nearly meaningless. PSA is a signal — and interpreting it properly requires context. Several key factors help determine whether there’s cause for concern in your case.

You need enough detail to understand what PSA is really showing, clear caveats so you don’t misinterpret the numbers, and above all, reassurance and guidance that the next step is with a specialist — not Dr. Google.

Let’s walk through the main considerations.

When Should You Start PSA Testing?

Most men can start PSA testing around age 50. But if you’re at higher risk, earlier testing – as early as 40, but definitely from 45 – makes sense. That includes men with a family history of prostate cancer, or even certain cancers in female relatives — like breast or ovarian cancer linked to the BRCA gene. Men of African ancestry (including African American and African Canadian men) also have a higher incidence of prostate cancer and are often advised to begin testing earlier.

Why does this matter? Because risk isn’t the same for everyone. A man with no family history may never develop prostate cancer. Another, with the same PSA number but a strong family history or higher-risk background, may need closer monitoring or earlier follow-up.

The takeaway: age is just the starting point. Your personal and family history – along with ancestry – help decide when PSA testing should begin.

How to get tested: Most men get the requisition from their family doctor. If you don’t have a GP, you can request one at a walk-in clinic.

PSA Over Time

One PSA result doesn’t tell the whole story. What matters most is how your PSA changes over time.

A steady PSA of 3 for years may be less concerning than a jump from 1.5 to 3 in a short period. That rate of rise is called PSA velocity.

Some increase is expected with age. But a sudden spike deserves closer attention. As a rule of thumb, a rise of more than 20% in a single year is suspicious for prostate cancer and usually prompts further investigation.

The trend is often more important than the number itself.

How often to test: A pattern usually takes at least two years to establish. If PSA stays stable, many doctors repeat it every 2-3 years. If it’s rising, closer follow-up is recommended.

PSA and Prostate Size

A bigger benign prostate usually makes more PSA. That’s why the same PSA number can mean different things in different men.

This is where PSA density comes in. It’s the PSA level compared to the size (volume) of the prostate.

A PSA of 5 might be less worrying in a man with a very large prostate. The same PSA of 5 in a man with a smaller prostate could mean something else.

Context matters. PSA should always be read alongside prostate size.

How prostate size is measured: It can be estimated during a physical exam, but the most accurate way is with imaging such as ultrasound or MRI.

Free-to-Total PSA Ratio

PSA in the blood comes in two forms: “free” and “bound.” The ratio between them can give extra clues.

  • A higher ratio (more free PSA) is usually reassuring.
  • A lower ratio (less free PSA) can point to a higher chance of prostate cancer.

It’s not a diagnosis on its own. But it helps decide whether further testing, like an MRI or biopsy, makes sense.

The free-to-total ratio is one more piece of the puzzle — useful when PSA alone doesn’t give a clear answer. Importantly, the free-to-total ratio is only accurate and useful when the total PSA is between 4 and 10. Outside that range, it’s not considered reliable for risk assessment.

Is this a separate test? Yes. Your doctor has to specifically order “free and total PSA” on the bloodwork requisition.

Other Reasons PSA Can Be High

An elevated PSA doesn’t always mean cancer.

In fact, many common conditions can push it up:

  • Inflammation or infection
  • Recent ejaculation
  • Recent catheter use or instrumentation
  • Even activities like cycling

This is why a single PSA test is never the whole story. Context is everything.

Wrapping It Up

PSA is a useful test — but only when interpreted properly. Age, family history, prostate size, changes over time, and free-to-total ratio all matter. So do the many non-cancer reasons PSA can rise.

If you’ve been told your PSA is high, don’t panic. And don’t make decisions based on one number.

PSA is only one part of the picture. If you have PSA results and other information such as prior tests, imaging, or family history, we can help put it all together and guide your next steps.

What We Treat at University Urology Associates

At University Urology Associates (UUA), we provide focused, evidence-based care for men’s prostate health, with particular expertise in the diagnosis and minimally invasive treatment of localized prostate cancer and BPH, and transperineal prostate biopsies.

We are a specialist clinic — not a general urology practice. That means we focus on a defined set of conditions where we can offer deep expertise and access to advanced diagnostic tools and minimally invasive treatments, including Health Canada- and FDA-approved technologies not widely available in Canada.

Our Areas of Focus

BPH (Enlarged Prostate) — Minimally Invasive Surgical Therapies (MISTs)

For men who have been evaluated by a physician and diagnosed (or strongly suspected) with BPH, we assess eligibility for office-based treatments designed to improve urinary symptoms without major surgery. Options include minimally invasive procedures such as Rezūm, iTind, and Optilume (when appropriate).

Prostate Cancer Diagnostics

When further investigation is needed after prior assessment (e.g., elevated or rising PSA, concerning imaging), we perform transperineal prostate biopsies, including MRI fusion-guided and systematic TRUS-guided approaches. The goal is accurate, targeted sampling to clarify the diagnosis and guide next steps.

Prostate Cancer Evaluation & Second Opinion

When further investigation is needed after prior assessment (e.g., elevated/rising PSA or concerning imaging), we perform transperineal prostate biopsies — including MRI-fusion–guided and systematic TRUS-guided approaches — to provide accurate, targeted sampling and guide next steps.

Prostate Cancer — Minimally Invasive Treatments

For eligible patients with localized prostate cancer, we offer focal, minimally invasive treatments including HIFU (High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound) and IRE (NanoKnife™). Suitability depends on clinical criteria, imaging, and biopsy findings.

Urethral Strictures — Minimally Invasive Treatment

We manage anterior urethral strictures with endoscopic, minimally invasive techniques, including drug-coated balloon dilation (e.g., Optilume) where indicated. Treatment selection is individualized to stricture characteristics and prior therapy.

Cosmetic (Adult) Circumcision

Outpatient adult circumcision performed in a clinical setting with local anesthesia, focusing on function, comfort, and cosmetic outcome.

Vasectomy

Outpatient vasectomy under local anesthesia for permanent contraception, with a straightforward, clinic-based recovery.

Staying Focused on What We Do Best

We concentrate exclusively on:

  • Prostate health
  • PSA evaluation and prostate biopsies
  • Minimally invasive treatments for localized prostate cancer
  • Minor surgical procedures such as vasectomy and adult circumcision
  • Minimally invasive treatment of anterior urethral strictures

We do not offer general urology services or treatments outside of this defined area of care. If your concern falls outside our scope, we recommend speaking with your family doctor or seeking care through a general urologist.

How to Get Started

UUA is appointment-based (no walk-ins). To begin, please complete our secure pre-screening form so we can determine fit and whether a consultation can be offered.

Start Pre-Screening Now