State of the Art: Personalizing Treatment for Patients With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer.
1/5 보강
Until recently, the treatment of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) relied exclusively on hormonal therapies and taxane chemotherapy.
APA
Abida W, Beltran H, Raychaudhuri R (2025). State of the Art: Personalizing Treatment for Patients With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer.. American Society of Clinical Oncology educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual Meeting, 45(3), e473636. https://doi.org/10.1200/EDBK-25-473636
MLA
Abida W, et al.. "State of the Art: Personalizing Treatment for Patients With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer.." American Society of Clinical Oncology educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual Meeting, vol. 45, no. 3, 2025, pp. e473636.
PMID
40112242 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
Until recently, the treatment of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) relied exclusively on hormonal therapies and taxane chemotherapy. The advent of modern molecular profiling methods applied in the clinic, namely, next-generation sequencing and advanced positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, has allowed for the development of biomarker-driven therapeutics including anti-PD-L1 therapy for microsatellite instability-high or tumor mutation burden-high disease, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors for patients with DNA damage repair mutations, and lutetium 177 vipivotide tetraxetan (Lu-PSMA-617) for patients with prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET-avid disease. While these targeted therapies have improved outcomes, there is an opportunity to refine biomarkers to optimize patient selection, understand resistance, and develop novel combination strategies. In addition, studies in the laboratory and in patient-derived samples have shown that a subset of mCRPC tumors lose expression of common prostate cancer markers such as prostate-specific antigen and PSMA because of lineage plasticity and the development of non-androgen receptor (AR)-driven disease. Non-AR-driven prostate cancer has been associated with aggressive behavior and poor prognosis, including in some cases histologic transformation to a poorly differentiated neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC). The clinical management of NEPC typically follows the treatment paradigm for small cell lung cancer and increasingly relies on genomic and phenotypic characterization of disease, including loss of tumor suppressors and expression of cell surface markers such as DLL3. Therefore, both genomic subtyping and phenotypic subtyping are important to consider and can guide the clinical management of patients with advanced prostate cancer.
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