US Trends

when should you get a prostate exam

You generally start talking about prostate exams between ages 40 and 50, depending on your risk, and then repeat them only as often as your doctor and PSA results suggest.

Key ages and risk levels

  • High risk (start earlier)
    • Black men, or anyone with a father, brother, or son with prostate cancer before age 65, or known BRCA1/BRCA2 genetic mutations.
* Start the conversation about PSA blood testing and a possible digital rectal exam (DRE) around **age 40–45**.
  • Average risk
    • No close family history and not in a higher‑risk group.
* Many expert groups suggest talking with your doctor about screening somewhere between **age 45 and 50**.
  • Older age
    • For many people, routine screening is not recommended after about 70–75 , or when serious health problems mean you are unlikely to benefit from early detection.

What “getting a prostate exam” usually means

  • A PSA blood test (prostate‑specific antigen) is the main screening test; it’s a simple blood draw.
  • A digital rectal exam (DRE) is sometimes done to feel the prostate for lumps or firmness, but some newer guidelines rely more on PSA plus discussion.
  • If PSA is under about 2.5 ng/mL , retesting every 2 years is often enough; if it is 2.5 or higher , yearly testing is more common.

Why it’s not one-size-fits-all

  • Large studies show that PSA screening can find cancers earlier but can also lead to overdiagnosis and unnecessary biopsies or treatment.
  • Because of this trade‑off, major bodies like the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American Cancer Society emphasize shared decision‑making : you and your clinician weigh your age, risk, and how you feel about potential benefits and harms.

Practical steps to take

  1. If you are 40–44 and high risk, or 45–50+ at average risk, schedule a visit specifically to talk about prostate cancer screening.
  1. Bring family history details (who had cancer and at what age).
  1. Ask directly:
    • “Given my age and risk, do you recommend a PSA test now?”
    • “How often would you repeat it if it’s normal?”
  1. If you are very anxious or have urinary symptoms (weak stream, frequent night urination, blood in urine), see your doctor even if you are younger than the usual screening ages.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.