Biomarkers for Treatment Response in Advanced Prostate Cancer.
Samia AsifBenjamin A TeplyPublished in: Cancers (2021)
Multiple treatment options with different mechanisms of action are currently available for the management of metastatic prostate cancer. However, the optimal use of these therapies-specifically, the sequencing of therapies-is not well defined. In order to obtain the best clinical outcomes, patients need to be treated with the therapies that are most likely to provide benefit and avoid toxic therapies that are unlikely to be effective. Ideally, predictive biomarkers that allow for the selection of the therapies most likely to be of benefit would be employed for each treatment decision. In practice, biomarkers including tumor molecular sequencing, circulating tumor DNA, circulating tumor cell enumeration and androgen receptor characteristics, and tumor cell surface expression (PSMA), all may have a role in therapy selection. In this review, we define the established prognostic and predictive biomarkers for therapy in advanced prostate cancer and explore emerging biomarkers.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- prostate cancer
- circulating tumor cells
- radical prostatectomy
- cell free
- single cell
- end stage renal disease
- cell surface
- ejection fraction
- small cell lung cancer
- chronic kidney disease
- primary care
- poor prognosis
- computed tomography
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stem cells
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- cell therapy
- quality improvement