Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) and prostatic specific antigen (PSA) were measured by immunochemical methods using test preparations from two different companies. In 66 patients with benign hyperplasia of the prostate a good correlation was found only between PSA levels (orthogonal regression analysis: y = 1.77 x -0.68; r = 0.995). Discrimination analysis between benign hyperplasia and new prostatic cancer (28 patients), using ROC curves, revealed a sensitivity for prostatic cancer of about 30 percent using both PAP methods and of about 58 percent using both PSA methods at the 95-percentile of benign hyperplasia. The PSA methods were both more sensitive in detecting prostatic cancer than the PAP methods.