A new method for prostate cancer imaging

Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers in men. Tumor growth is critically regulated by the androgen receptor, and treatment strategies to lower androgens, such as testosterone, are a mainstay of clinical treatment. Over time, however, resistance frequently develops and the disease may progress to a castration-resistant form that expresses a variant of the androgen receptor, which evades blockade by drugs that dampen androgen receptor signaling. Thus, clinically there is an urgent need to identify patients expressing androgen receptor variants to determine which treatment options are likely to benefit patients.

In this issue ofJCI Insight, researchers at the University of British Columbia describe a new imaging tool to detect the presence of theand its active splice variants.

Led by Marianne Sadar, the research group developed an analog of an investigational drug that binds to portions of the androgen receptor that are common to the full length and variant forms of the androgen receptor.

In a mouse model of prostate cancer, they showed that this compound specifically detectedexpressing androgen receptor by SPECT/CT imaging.

These findings suggest that this imaging agent may be suitable for further development for castration-resistantpatients.

更多的信息:Yusuke Imamura et al, An imaging agent to detect androgen receptor and its active splice variants in prostate cancer,JCI Insight(2016).DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.87850
Provided by JCI Journals
Citation: A new method for prostate cancer imaging (2016, July 21) retrieved 30 December 2022 from //www.pyrotek-europe.com/news/2016-07-method-prostate-cancer-imaging.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Study finds first evidence that PD-1 antibody could help men with metastatic prostate cancer

1shares

Feedback to editors