AI Article Synopsis

  • Prostate Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA) PET is used to guide metastasis-directed radiotherapy (MDRT) in prostate cancer, but its effectiveness in assessing treatment response is still uncertain.
  • *A study of 11 men with oligo-metastatic prostate cancer found that MDRT significantly reduced PSMA expression in some cases, suggesting treatment effectiveness, particularly in more aggressive cancer cell lines.
  • *The research indicates that while PSMA-PET could be helpful in evaluating radiotherapy outcomes, further studies are needed to fully understand its potential and the impact of radiotherapy on PSMA gene expression.

Article Abstract

Background: Prostate Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA) - positron emission tomography (PET) guides metastasis-directed radiotherapy (MDRT) in prostate cancer (PrCa). However, its value as a treatment response assessment tool after MDRT remains unclear. Importantly, there is limited understanding of the potential of radiotherapy (RT) to alter PSMA gene (folate hydrolase 1; FOLH1) expression.

Methodology: We reviewed a series of 11 men with oligo-metastatic PrCa (25 metastasis sites) treated with MDRT before re-staging with F-DCFPyL (PSMA) PET upon secondary recurrence. Acute effects of RT on PSMA protein and mRNA levels were examined with qPCR and immunoblotting in human wild-type androgen-sensitive (LNCap), castrate-resistant (22RV1) and castrate-resistant neuroendocrine (PC3 and DU145) PrCa cell lines. Xenograft tumors were analyzed with immunohistochemistry. Further, we examined PSMA expression in untreated and irradiated radio-resistant (RR) 22RV1 (22RV1-RR) and DU145 (DU145-RR) cells and xenografts selected for survival after high-dose RT.

Results: The majority of MDRT-treated lesions showed lack of PSMA-PET/CT avidity, suggesting treatment response even after low biological effective dose (BED) MDRT. We observed similar high degree of heterogeneity of PSMA expression in both human specimens and in xenograft tumors. PSMA was highly expressed in LNCap and 22RV1 cells and tumors but not in the neuroendocrine PC3 and DU145 models. Single fraction RT caused detectable reduction in PSMA protein but not in mRNA levels in LNCap cells and did not significantly alter PSMA protein or mRNA levels in tissue culture or xenografts of the other cell lines. However, radio-resistant 22RV1-RR cells and tumors demonstrated marked decrease of PSMA transcript and protein expression over their parental counterparts.

Conclusions: PSMA-PET may be a promising tool to assess RT response in oligo-metastatic PrCa. However, future systematic investigation of this concept should recognize the high degree of heterogeneity of PSMA expression within prostate tumors and the risk for loss of PSMA expression in tumor surviving curative courses of RT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9879766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ctro.2023.100583DOI Listing

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