ROBERT DREICER, MD: Over the last twenty years, there has been a lot of work trying to determine what a normal or abnormal level of prostate-specific antigen is. And for the early part, in the '80s and '90s, people used a cutoff of a value of 4 and said below that's normal and above that is abnormal; we know that that's actually not true. There are, in a sense, really no "normal" levels of PSA. There are ranges of PSA.
ANNOUNCER: For younger men, some doctors now say it is reasonable to be concerned when the PSA rises to 2.5.
PHILIP KANTOFF, MD: The normal level of PSA changes over a man's lifetime. So as men get older and older, the prevalence of benign prostatic hyperplasia increases, and generally men's glands increase, so the actual cutpoint of normal/abnormal changes as a function of age.
Generally speaking, what's the acceptable cutoff is 2.5 right now. So above 2.5 is considered an abnormal PSA.
Having said that, there are men who are older, in their 70s, where one might accept a level of 2.5 because the likelihood that that person's elevation in PSA is a result of benign prostatic hyperplasia is much higher and their likelihood of having prostate cancer is actually lower.
ANNOUNCER: Doctors are also interested in how the PSA level changes over time.
WILLIAM OH, MD: So, for example, a PSA that was rising very, very slowly over many years, even if the number itself was over 4, would be much less worrisome than a number that went from 2 to 4 in one year, for example.