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Cancer Screening Markers

PSA Prostate Screen

PSA screening is recommended from age 50 — or age 40 for men with a family history. A simple fingerstick gives you the data to act.

1 biomarker Home fingerstick kit Results in 3 to 5 working days GMC physician review
4.8 (214 reviews)
£39.00

or 4 interest-free payments of £9.75 with Klarna

Collection method Self-collected fingerstick
Quantity 1 kit
1
UKAS accredited ISO 15189 laboratory
UK GDPR secure Barcoded, anonymous sample
GMC-reviewed Physician-signed report
PSA Prostate Screen
UKAS ISO 15189
Accredited
Product description

Measure your PSA (prostate-specific antigen) level with a simple home fingerstick test. Recommended for men over 50, or over 40 with a family history.

Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a protein produced by the prostate gland. Elevated PSA levels can indicate prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia), prostate inflammation (prostatitis), or prostate cancer. While PSA is not a definitive cancer test — and elevated levels have multiple potential causes — it is the most widely used screening marker for identifying men who warrant further investigation. The NHS Prostate Cancer Risk Management Programme offers PSA testing to men aged 50 and over who request it after discussion of the benefits and limitations. This test provides that same measurement with the added value of GMC-registered physician review and clear commentary on next steps relative to your result. Men with a family history of prostate cancer or of Black African or Caribbean heritage are advised to consider testing from age 40. All analysis is performed at a UKAS ISO 15189-accredited laboratory.

Reviewed by the Trupoint medical board · Last updated May 2026
What we measure

Every biomarker, explained

Understand what each marker measures, why it matters, and what the science says — not just a list of numbers.

1
Biomarkers in this panel
1
Physiological systems covered
1
Sample
24 - 48
Hours
1 MARKERS

Cancer Screening Markers

Is this right for me?

Who this test is for

This panel is designed for adults who want a comprehensive, evidence-based picture of their metabolic health — not a GP referral panel.

Men Aged 50

Men aged 50 and over who have not had a recent PSA check

Men Of Any Age With A

Men of any age with a first-degree relative (father, brother) diagnosed with prostate cancer

Men Of Black African Or Caribbean

Men of Black African or Caribbean heritage, who have two to three times the population average risk

Men With Urinary Symptoms (Frequent Urination

Men with urinary symptoms (frequent urination, reduced flow, nocturia) wanting to check their prostate health

Men Being Monitored Following Previous Elevated

Men being monitored following previous elevated PSA or prostatitis

Not appropriate for Men who have ejaculated in the 48 hours before testing (PSA will be transiently elevated). Those with acute urinary tract infection or current prostatitis (PSA will be markedly elevated and non-diagnostic). Men who have had a prostate biopsy within the past six weeks
Transparency

Test limitations

PSA is an organ-specific marker, not a cancer-specific marker. It is elevated in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), prostatitis, and vigorous physical activity (particularly cycling or horse-riding), as well as prostate cancer. An elevated PSA requires further investigation — typically GP referral for digital rectal examination and consideration of MRI or biopsy — but does not constitute a cancer diagnosis. Conversely, a normal PSA does not exclude prostate cancer; approximately 15 percent of prostate cancers occur in men with PSA below 4 ng/mL. PSA velocity (the rate of change over time) is often more informative than a single result, which is why serial testing at annual intervals is recommended for men in higher-risk groups. This test is not a substitute for GP review or specialist urological assessment.

Reviewed annually by our medical advisory board.
The process

How it works

From order to physician-reviewed report in as little as three working days.

Day 0

Order your kit

Home fingerstick kit delivered within 2 working days.

Day 1

Observe preparation rules

No ejaculation for 48 hours; no vigorous cycling or exercise for 48 hours before collection.

Day 2

Collect and post

Pre-paid Royal Mail envelope included.

Day 3

View your result

Secure online report with physician commentary in 3 to 5 working days.

Sample collection

Choose how you collect

Three options designed to fit your schedule, location, and preference — all producing a laboratory-standard sample.

Eligibility

Adults 18+ in mainland UK. Not suitable if you have had a transfusion in the last 3 months.

Availability

Order anytime; kit dispatched within 24 hours Mon–Fri.

Turnaround

Allow 24–48 hours for sample transit on top of lab processing time.

Why Trupoint

Built on rigorous science and UK regulatory standards

Every test is processed in a UKAS ISO 15189-accredited laboratory, overseen by GMC-registered physicians, and governed by UK GDPR. No overseas processing, no offshore data.

ISO 15189 accredited laboratory
GMC-registered physician review
CQC-registered service
GDPR-compliant data handling
2.4M+
Tests processed
99.4%
On-time results
11 yrs
Lab partnership tenure
Before your test

Preparation instructions

Follow these guidelines to ensure accurate, reproducible results. Most markers are sensitive to recent food, exercise, and sleep.

Please do

  • Abstain from ejaculation for at least 48 hours before collection
  • Avoid vigorous cycling, motorcycling, or horse-riding for 48 hours before collection
  • Collect at least 6 weeks after any urological procedure or prostate biopsy

Please avoid

  • Do not test during or immediately after a urinary tract infection or prostatitis episode
  • Do not test within 48 hours of a digital rectal examination
Support

Frequently asked questions

Can't find your answer? Our clinical support team is available Monday to Friday, 9am–5pm.

Contact support

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a normal PSA level?

PSA reference ranges are age-adjusted. As a general guide, PSA below 2.5 ng/mL is considered normal for men under 60, below 3.5 ng/mL for men aged 60 to 69, and below 4.5 ng/mL for men aged 70 and over. However, these thresholds are guides rather than absolute cutoffs; the clinical significance depends on your age, ethnicity, symptoms, and the PSA trajectory over time. Men with PSA consistently above the age-adjusted range should be referred for further evaluation. Men with PSA in the range of 4 to 10 ng/mL have approximately a 25 percent chance of prostate cancer on biopsy; above 10 ng/mL the probability rises above 50 percent.

Does an elevated PSA mean I have prostate cancer?

No. PSA elevation is common and has many causes other than cancer. Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) — age-related prostate enlargement — is the most common cause of elevated PSA in men over 50. Prostatitis (prostate inflammation), vigorous prostate-stimulating activities such as cycling, and recent ejaculation all transiently raise PSA. An elevated result triggers further investigation — typically GP referral, digital rectal examination, and consideration of multiparametric MRI — which helps distinguish cancer from benign causes with far greater precision than PSA alone. Your physician commentary will clearly explain what level of concern your specific result warrants.

Should all men have annual PSA tests?

Current NHS guidance does not recommend universal annual PSA screening for all men, citing concerns about overdiagnosis of low-risk cancers that would never cause harm. However, individual risk assessment is different from population screening. Men who are at higher risk due to age (over 50), ethnicity (Black African or Caribbean heritage), or family history are increasingly advised by specialists to consider annual PSA monitoring so that a rising trajectory can be detected early. Your physician commentary will advise on the appropriate frequency of testing based on your result, age, and risk profile.

What happens if my PSA is elevated?

An elevated PSA result triggers a pathway of further investigation. Your physician commentary will recommend discussing the result with your GP, who can arrange a digital rectal examination and, if appropriate, referral to a urologist. NICE guidance now recommends multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) as the first-line investigation for elevated PSA, as this reduces unnecessary biopsies while maintaining sensitivity for clinically significant cancer. The MRI result, combined with your PSA level and any palpable prostate abnormality, guides the decision about whether a biopsy is needed.

Can PSA be monitored over time to track prostate health?

Yes, and this is one of the most valuable uses of serial PSA testing. PSA velocity — the rate at which PSA increases over time — is often more clinically significant than any single reading. A PSA rise of more than 0.75 ng/mL per year is considered significant and warrants urological review even if the absolute level remains within the reference range. Annual testing from a recorded baseline allows you and your GP to detect concerning trajectories early, when intervention is most effective.

Are there factors that lower PSA and might mask an elevated level?

Yes. 5-alpha reductase inhibitors (finasteride, dutasteride), commonly prescribed for BPH or male pattern hair loss, reduce PSA by approximately 50 percent. Men on these medications need their PSA result doubled to obtain a comparable reading to an untreated baseline. Statins have also been shown in some studies to mildly lower PSA. If you are taking any of these medications, your physician commentary will flag the adjustment required for accurate interpretation.