Can men hold off on treating recurring prostate cancer?

Mar 12, 2026
5 min read
Semih Pala
Back to Blog
Can men hold off on treating recurring prostate cancer?
This means that PSA - the biochemical marker in this case - is flagging the presence of cancer cells that doctors are still unable to see. Now, an ultra-sensitive scanning technology is raising new questions about biochemical recurrence and how to manage it. If there's no accompanying evidence of cancer on imaging scans, then men have what's called a biochemical recurrence.
What happens if PSA levels start rising after surgery or radiation for prostate cancer? Up to a third of men treated for the disease will eventually confront this problem. If there's no accompanying evidence of cancer on imaging scans, then men have what's called a biochemical recurrence. This means that PSA - the biochemical marker in this case - is flagging the presence of cancer cells that doctors are still unable to see. Biochemically recurring cancer is asymptomatic, and it can take years for visible metastases to appear. Sometimes men live the rest of their lives with a rising PSA without ever developing metastases. Now, an ultra-sensitive scanning technology is raising new questions about biochemical recurrence and how to manage it.