| Literature DB >> 29545375 |
Roberto A Salas Fragomeni1, Tali Amir1, Sara Sheikhbahaei1, Susan C Harvey1, Mehrbod S Javadi1, Lilja B Solnes1, Ana P Kiess2, Mohamad E Allaf3, Martin G Pomper1,3, Michael A Gorin1,3, Steven P Rowe4,3.
Abstract
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a type II transmembrane glycoprotein that is highly overexpressed on prostate cancer epithelial cells and for which there is a growing body of literature examining the role of small-molecule and antibody radiotracers targeted against this protein for prostate cancer detection and therapy. Despite its name, PSMA is also expressed, to varying degrees, in the neovasculature of a wide variety of nonprostate cancers; indeed, the pathology literature is replete with promising immunohistochemistry findings. Several groups have begun to correlate those pathology-level results with in vivo imaging and therapy in nonprostate cancers using the same PSMA-targeted agents that have been so successful in prostate cancer. The potential to leverage radiotracers targeted to PSMA beyond prostate cancer is a promising approach for many cancers, and PSMA-targeted agents may be able to supplement or fill gaps left by other agents. However, to date, most of the reported findings with PSMA-targeted radiotracers in nonprostate malignancies have been in case reports and small case series, and the field must adopt a more thorough approach to the design and execution of larger prospective trials to realize the potential of these promising agents outside prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PET; PSMA; breast cancer; lung cancer; renal cell carcinoma
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29545375 DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.117.203570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucl Med ISSN: 0161-5505 Impact factor: 10.057