“I think the prostate cancer community has benefited a lot in the past several years with the advent of enhanced imaging tools to help us better stage patients with prostate cancer both at their initial diagnosis and if, unfortunately, they have a recurrence,” says Edward M. Schaeffer, MD, PhD.
In this video, Edward M. Schaeffer, MD, PhD, discusses the emergence of prostate-specific membrane antigen-targeting agents in prostate cancer. Schaeffer is chair and Harold Binstein Professor of Urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, Illinois.
I think the prostate cancer community has benefited a lot in the past several years with the advent of enhanced imaging tools to help us better stage patients with prostate cancer both at their initial diagnosis and if, unfortunately, they have a recurrence. So there are now 3 FDA-approved PSMA-linked compounds that can be used to more accurately stage patients with prostate cancer across different areas of their care continuum, so at their initial diagnosis, and also if they had previously been treated and develop a recurrence. I think in general, there are some subtle differences between the compounds and how they "behave" in terms of their solubility, lipid vs water soluble and therefore how they're excreted. Also, there are some subtle differences in terms of just how you see them with the radiotracers that they're linked to. Big picture: I think there are now 3 compounds on the market. They all have really great, relatively overlapping applicability, which is super for the providers and the patients because they now have choices, and I appreciate that in certain regions, there may be limitations to getting access to one of them. So having 3 of them on the market is really a boon for the patients that we take care of.
This transcript was edited for clarity.
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