Prostate Cancer Support Groups

Welcome to the PCFC

We Walk With You Every Step of Your Journey

Catch It Early. Save a Life.

Awareness leads to screening.
screening saves lives.

We are glad you are here! Chances are you’ve landed on this page because either:

  1. You are concerned that you may have prostate cancer
  2. You are concerned that a loved one may have prostate cancer.

Did you know that 1 in 8 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer? Those are tough odds – but here’s the GREAT NEWS – catching it early increases your chances of survival of 5 years to 99%. Most live long, normal life spans!

Remember, at the PCFC We Walk With You Every Step of Your Journey

What do I Need to do?

  1. Own your health. This is not your wife or partner’s responsibility – this is YOUR body. Do you let your car go 20k miles without an oil change? Didn’t think so. That being said, there is a point in your life where you should get your PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen) level checked. We recommend age 45, unless you are African-American or have a history of prostate cancer in your family. In this case, you should be checked starting at age 40. (see guidelines at bottom of page)
  2. Find a method of testing your PSA. If you have a primary care doctor, make an appointment. If you don’t, you can go to a walk-in clinic to get a test. 
  3. Act if you get a positive result. Prostate cancer is NOT a death sentence if caught early. It’s very treatable with high recovery rates. So don’t curl up in a ball – consult your doctor for next steps for your (and your loved one’s) sake.

The American Urological Society 2026 guidance on Prostate Cancer screening*:

  1. Clinicians should engage in shared decision-making (SDM) with people for whom prostate cancer screening would be appropriate and proceed based on a person’s values and preferences. 
  1. When screening for prostate cancer, clinicians should use PSA as the first screening test.
  1. For people with a newly elevated PSA, clinicians should repeat the PSA prior to a secondary biomarker, imaging, or biopsy. 
  1. Clinicians may begin prostate cancer screening and offer a baseline PSA test to people between ages 45 to 50 years. 
  1. Clinicians should offer prostate cancer screening beginning at age 40 to 45 years for people at increased risk of developing prostate cancer based on the following: Black race, germline mutations, strong family history of prostate cancer. 
  1. Clinicians should offer regular prostate cancer screening every 2 to 4 years to people aged 50 to 69 years.

*Lin DW, Carlsson S, Filson CP, et al. Updates to Early Detection of Prostate Cancer: AUA/SUO Guideline (2026).J Urol. 0(0).10.1097/JU.0000000000004995. https://www.auajournals.org/doi/10.1097/JU.0000000000004995

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