Referral criteria from primary care - benign prostatic hyperplasia
Specialist referral should be considered for
- patients with severe symptoms particularly when rapidly progressive
- where rectal examination is abnormal
- in complicated BPH e.g. recurrent urinary infections, haematuria, urinary retention, obstructive nephropathy, bladder stones
- patients with raised PSA
- patients who fail to respond to drug treatment for BPH
Consider urgent referral guidance re: prostate cancer (2)
- refer men using a suspected cancer pathway referral (for an appointment within 2 weeks) for prostate cancer if their prostate feels malignant on digital rectal examination
- consider a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test and digital rectal examination to assess for prostate cancer in men with:
- any lower urinary tract symptoms, such as nocturia, urinary frequency, hesitancy, urgency or
- retention or
- erectile dysfunction or
- visible haematuria
- refer men using a suspected cancer pathway referral (for an appointment within 2 weeks) for prostate cancer if their PSA levels are above the age-specific reference range
Reference:
- Prescribers' Journal (1999), 39 (1), 9-15.
- NICE (June 2015). Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer
Related pages
Create an account to add page annotations
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.