Introduction—Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer: A Rapidly Expanding Clinical State and a Model for New Therapeutic Opportunities

Author(s):  
Mario A. Eisenberger ◽  
Fred Saad
2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 222-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen A. Autio ◽  
Phillip Wong ◽  
Angel Rabinowitz ◽  
Jianda Yuan ◽  
Lauryn Michelle Slavin ◽  
...  

222 Background: MDSC contribute to an immune suppressive environment and have been implicated in cancer progression. Measurement (identification and enumeration) is challenged by the lack of analytically valid assays limiting data interpretation between groups. This impacts our understanding of rationale immune targets and design of clinical trials. We employed a novel biomarker based assay in whole blood to enumerate MDSC from patients with metastatic castration sensitive (CSPC) and castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Methods: Whole blood was collected in Cyto-Chex (Streck) tubes. A published computational algorithm-based approach (developed by Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and commercialized by Serametrix) was employed to determine the %MDSC-monocytic and coefficient of variance (CV=ratio of SD and geometric mean fluorescence intensity) to assess HLA-DR spread on CD14+CD11b cells. Samples were performed in duplicate. Clinical variables including clinical state, past and current treatment, metastatic sites, PSA, and standard prognostic markers were collected. Results: 36 pts with metastatic prostate cancer (29 CRPC; 7 CSPC) were included. Median (SD) %MDSC in 29 CRPC pts was 21.15 (5.33) and median (SD) CV was1.29 (0.25); 7 CSPC demonstrated a median (SD) %MDSC 19.15 (4.86) and median (SD) CV 1.22 (0.25). MDSC did not differ between chemotherapy exposed (n=13) and chemotherapy naive (n=16) CRPC (23.3 vs 19.5, p=ns). MDSC were not significantly higher in those with visceral mets, though a trend existed (20.3 vs 24.0, p=0.076). PSA did not appear to correlate with MDSC or CV. Conclusions: Understanding the distribution and characterization of MDSC in various clinical states in prostate cancer is relevant to the development of immune targets in this disease. MDSC were quantifiable in both CSPC and CRPC. There was a trend for higher MDSC values in patients with visceral metastases, which historically are associated with worse prognoses. Presence of MDSC in metastatic CSPC and CRPC has important therapeutic and trial implications. Further discovery in larger cohorts and earlier disease states is underway.


Author(s):  
Daniel Westaby ◽  
Paul V. Viscuse ◽  
Rahul Ravilla ◽  
Maria de los Dolores Fenor de la Maza ◽  
Andrew Hahn ◽  
...  

Targeting the androgen receptor by depriving testosterone with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists or antagonists, or surgical castration, has been the backbone of metastatic prostate cancer treatment. Although most prostate cancers initially respond to androgen deprivation, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer evolves into a heterogeneous disease with diverse drivers of progression and mechanisms of therapeutic resistance. Development of castrate resistance phenotype is associated with lethality despite the recent noteworthy strides gained via increase in therapeutic options. Identification of novel therapeutics to further improve survival and achieve durable responses in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is a clinical necessity. In this review, we outline the existing avengers for treatment of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer by clinical presentation, placing into context the clinical state of the patient, such as burden of disease and symptoms. Doing so might aid in the ability to optimize the sequence of agents and allow for maximal exposure to life-prolonging therapeutics. Realizing the limitations of the androgen signaling inhibition, we explore the androgen-indifferent prostate cancer: the mutants. Classically, these subtypes have been associated with variant histology, but androgen-indifferent prostate cancer features are now frequently observed in association with heterogeneous morphologies, including double-negative prostate cancers, lacking both androgen receptor and neuroendocrine features, or clinicopathologic criteria, such as the aggressive variant prostate cancer criteria. The framework of new avengers against metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer based on mechanism, including DNA repair, immune checkpoint inhibition, PTEN/PI3K/AKT pathway, prostate-specific membrane antigen targets, bispecific T-cell engagers, and radionuclide therapies, is summarized in this review.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitchell G Lawrence ◽  
Laura H Porter ◽  
Daisuke Obinata ◽  
Shahneen Sandhu ◽  
Luke A Selth ◽  
...  

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