Introduction: In the advanced stage of prostate cancer, bone is consistently the first and, later on, the dominant extra-nodal metastatic site. Bone metastases account for most of prostate cancer's morbidity.

Materials And Methods: We have performed a literature review using the MEDLINE database for publications on: 1) bone metastases (androgen deprivation therapy); 2) cancer treatment induce bone loss; 3) skeletal related events; 4) denosumab; 5) zoledronic acid.

Results: Prostate cancer cells disrupt the normal bone remodeling process, invade the skeletal environment, and ultimately weaken the bone structure. This may result in skeletal complications, also known as skeletal related events (SREs), including pain, fractures, spinal cord compressions requiring surgery, radiotherapy or change in anti-cancer treatments. SREs negatively impact quality-of-life and survival and represent a major cost for the healthcare system. The bone metastases conundrum is further aggravated by the fact that androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), the reference systemic treatment of advanced prostate cancer, profoundly affects the skeletal integrity as well. ADT accelerates the physiological bone resorption, leading to osteoporosis and fragility fractures.

Conclusion: The concept of "bone health" or "skeletal heath" refers to the diagnostic, prevention, and treatment of cancer treatment induced bone loss (CTIBL) and metastasis, and their respective complications, osteoporotic fractures and SREs.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

prostate cancer
16
bone metastases
12
bone
10
advanced prostate
8
androgen deprivation
8
deprivation therapy
8
cancer treatment
8
bone loss
8
skeletal events
8
cancer
6

Similar Publications

More micrometastases, more recurrence? The role of qPCR of PSA mRNA in lymph nodes during prostatectomy.

World J Urol

January 2025

Department of Urology, Urooncology, Robot-assisted and Focal Therapy, University Hospital Magdeburg, Otto-von Guericke University Magdeburg, Leipziger Str. 44, 39120, Magdeburg, Germany.

Background And Objectives: Radical prostatectomy is a standard treatment for prostate cancer, yet about 30% of patients experience rising biochemical markers within a decade post-surgery. Pelvic lymph node sampling during prostatectomy assesses potential lymph node metastases, but standard histological assessments, which typically examine only 2-3 tissue sections, often miss occult metastases. This study assesses the effectiveness of qPCR in detecting PSA coding KLK3 mRNA for identifying lymph node metastases post-prostatectomy and explores the correlation between PSA-mRNA and biochemical recurrence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prostate cancer is a disease which poses an interesting clinical question: Should it be treated? Only a small subset of prostate cancers are aggressive and require removal and treatment to prevent metastatic spread. However, conventional diagnostics remain challenged to risk-stratify such patients; hence, new methods of approach to biomolecularly sub-classify the disease are needed. Here we use an unsupervised self-organising map approach to analyse live-cell Raman spectroscopy data obtained from prostate cell-lines; our aim is to exemplify this method to sub-stratify, at the single-cell-level, the cancer disease state using high-dimensional datasets with minimal preprocessing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

CXCL14 is a highly conserved chemokine expressed in various cell types, playing crucial roles in both physiological and pathological processes, including immune regulation and tumorigenesis. Recently, the role of CXCL14 in tumors has attracted considerable attention. However, previous pan-cancer studies have reported inconsistencies regarding the effects of CXCL14 on tumors, particularly concerning its expression levels in tumor tissues and its influence on various phenotypes of cancer cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prognostic Value of Response Evaluation Using PSMA PET/CT in Patients with Metastatic Prostate Cancer (RECIP 1.0): A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

Acad Radiol

January 2025

University Medical Imaging Toronto, Joint Department of Medical Imaging, University Health Network-Sinai Health System -Women's College Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada (S.A.M., P.V.H., U.M., A.B.D.). Electronic address:

Rationale And Objectives: Recently, the Response Evaluation Using PSMA PET/CT in Patients with Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (RECIP 1.0) was proposed to better evaluate treatment response in prostate cancer patients using PET/CT with prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) than more traditional approaches like metabolic PET evaluation response criteria in solid tumor (PERCIST 1.0).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To determine outcomes of MRI-assisted radiosurgery (MARS) for salvage brachytherapy using the radioisotope Pd after various upfront treatments including surgery, external beam radiotherapy, and brachytherapy.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed data for patients who underwent salvage MARS for intraprostatic lesions or prostate bed recurrences from 2016 to 2022. Biochemical recurrence, prostate cancer-specific, and overall survival, and the cumulative incidences of toxicities, were determined by Kaplan-Meier estimates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!