New Jersey condition guide
Prostate cancer and elevated PSA care in New Jersey
An elevated PSA or a new prostate cancer diagnosis raises urgent questions about next steps. This page explains how New Jersey urologists approach PSA evaluation, prostate biopsy, and prostate cancer, and connects you with NJ urologists who focus on prostate cancer care.
What patients search for
Local elevated PSA and prostate biopsy searches usually happen after a lab result, MRI finding, prior monitoring, or a physician recommending biopsy discussion.
How New Jersey urologists evaluate and treat prostate cancer and PSA
A urologist may review PSA trend, age, prostate size, family history, infection or inflammation factors, MRI, biopsy approach, anesthesia, infection prevention, pathology timing, and follow-up plan.
When symptoms should not wait
High PSA alone is usually scheduled care, but fever, urinary retention, severe pain, or rapidly worsening urinary symptoms should be handled promptly.
New Jersey urologists who treat prostate cancer and PSA
These urologists list this area among their focus areas on their practice's own published bio. This is not a ranking or endorsement — verify credentials and fit with the practice.
Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS
Innovative Urology — Perth Amboy, NJ
View public profileSandip M. Prasad, MD, MPhil
Garden State Urology — Morristown (James Street) — Morristown, NJ
View public profileMichael D. Stifelman, MD
Hackensack Meridian Health Urology — Hackensack — Hackensack, NJ
View public profileRavi Munver, MD
Hackensack Meridian Health Urology — Hackensack — Hackensack, NJ
View public profileJohn J. Hosay Jr., MD
Englewood Health Physician Network — Urology at Jersey City — Jersey City, NJ
View public profileCommon questions
- What kind of urologist treats prostate cancer in New Jersey?
- Prostate cancer is often managed by a urologic oncologist — a urologist with additional fellowship training in cancers of the urinary tract. This page lists New Jersey urologists whose stated focus includes prostate cancer; an elevated PSA alone can usually start with any urologist.
- Is an elevated PSA an emergency?
- An elevated PSA on its own is usually scheduled, not urgent, but it should be evaluated. Fever, urinary retention, or severe symptoms should be handled promptly. This page is educational and not a substitute for your urologist's advice.
Educational notice
This page is educational, draws on FindAUrologist care guidance and the public sources listed above, and is not medical advice or an endorsement. It contains no rankings, ratings, reviews, paid placement, insurance details, or scheduling. Talk with a urologist about your situation; for emergencies, call 911.
