Without knowing what kinda bow you are shooting, I can only stab wildly at what the issue is.... most often, it is simple idler lean with a single cam bow... the idler wheel will look like its canted off center at full draw... a couple twists in the yoke on the high side should balance her out.
If you have a binary cam bow like a bowtech... you kinda gotta live with that.
With a Hoyt... something is probably wrong beyond your repair, and it usually takes a call to my girls in Utah (the Hoyt girls I talk to are always super nice), and a RA # with some new limbs or limbs pockets to fix this.
Granted.... I just touched on the three major cam systems... and the three major companies that employ each system.... Singles are singles, binary's are binary's, and hybrids are hybrids.
I don't honestly think that your problem is bow torque.... it could be... but if it is, at least you are doing it exactly the same every time. Most folks won't torque a bow bad enough to let it rub the cables. And if that was the case.. you could reposition your hand and correct the problem.... and you wouldn't be looking for answers on the net.
If the bow was recently serviced, there is the off chance that someone pressed it improperly. This is the hectic time of year in the life of the pro-shop mafias, and sometimes people get impatient and get in a rush and mistakes are made. Not saying thats the case, or even a likely possibility... but it is a possibility never-the-less.