referral criteria from primary care - benign prostatic hyperplasia
Last edited 03/2021 and last reviewed 03/2021
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