AI Article Synopsis

  • Prostate cancer (PCa) is the leading form of cancer (excluding skin cancer) in men, and recent advancements in imaging and treatment have improved the diagnosis and therapy options for those affected, particularly for advanced and metastatic cases.
  • Advances in urea-based, small-molecule inhibitors targeting prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) have shown promise in initial staging and detecting recurrent PCa, providing high specificity for identifying pelvic nodal involvement.
  • A specific PSMA-targeted therapy has been linked to improved survival outcomes when used alongside standard treatments for patients with metastatic, castration-resistant PCa, suggesting new opportunities for more effective therapies in the future.

Article Abstract

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common noncutaneous malignancy in men. Until recent years, accurate imaging of men with newly diagnosed PCa, or recurrent or low-volume metastatic disease, was limited. Further, therapeutic options for men with advanced, metastatic, castration-resistant disease were increasingly limited as a result of increasing numbers of systemic therapies being combined in the upfront metastatic setting. The advent of urea-based, small-molecule inhibitors of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) has partially addressed those shortcomings in diagnosis and therapy of PCa. On the diagnostic side, there are multiple pivotal phase III trials with several different agents having demonstrated utility in the initial staging setting, with generally modest sensitivity but very high specificity for determining otherwise-occult pelvic nodal involvement. That latter statistic drives the utility of the scan by allowing imaging interpreters to read with very high sensitivity while maintaining a robust specificity. Other pivotal phase III trials have demonstrated high detection efficiency in patients with biochemical failure, with high positive predictive value at the lesion level, opening up possible new avenues of therapy such as metastasis-directed therapy. Beyond the diagnostic aspects of PSMA-targeted radiotracers, the same urea-based chemical scaffolds can be altered to deliver therapeutic isotopes to PCa cells that express PSMA. To date, one such agent, when combined with best standard-of-care therapy, has demonstrated an ability to improve overall survival, progression-free survival, and freedom from skeletal events relative to best standard-of-care therapy alone in men with metastatic, castration-resistant PCa who are post chemotherapy. Within the current milieu, there are a number of important future directions including the use of artificial intelligence to better leverage diagnostic findings, further medicinal chemistry refinements to the urea-based structure that may allow improved tumor targeting and decreased toxicities, and the incorporation of new radionuclides that may better balance efficacy with toxicities than those nuclides that are available.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PPO.0000000000000718DOI Listing

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