Miguel Muniz, Daniel S Childs, Jack Andrews, Ahmed M Mahmoud, Sean Park, Oliver Sartor, Adam M Kase, Irbaz B Riaz, Bradley J Stish, Aadel A Chaudhuri, Pradeep S Chauhan, Ryan Phillips, Fabrice Lucien, Jacob J Orme
{"title":"转移定向放疗治疗少复发前列腺癌患者的延迟全身治疗。","authors":"Miguel Muniz, Daniel S Childs, Jack Andrews, Ahmed M Mahmoud, Sean Park, Oliver Sartor, Adam M Kase, Irbaz B Riaz, Bradley J Stish, Aadel A Chaudhuri, Pradeep S Chauhan, Ryan Phillips, Fabrice Lucien, Jacob J Orme","doi":"10.21037/atm-24-187","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Distant metastasis marks a critical transition in prostate cancer, separating potentially curable from canonically incurable disease. Oligometastatic disease, defined as limited metastases (e.g., less than 3, 5, or 10), can encompass different clinical scenarios, including oligorecurrent disease (characterized by a limited number of metastatic lesions that recur after initial definitive treatment), and has emerged as an intermediate or transitional state. While intensified systemic therapies are increasingly applied to metastatic cases, many patients prefer to delay starting castrating therapies. Metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) is a safe and effective alternative to systemic therapy in a subset of patients with well-defined oligometastatic disease. Recent advances in imaging technologies and emerging treatment paradigms pose clinical challenges for patient risk stratification and optimal treatment selection. Here, we explore two key developments in the field: the influence of advanced imaging on clinical decision-making and the growing role of radiotherapy (RT) in oligometastatic disease management. We explore the landscape of novel biomarkers to estimate micrometastatic disease burden, which eludes imaging, using the concept of \"liquid tumor burden\" (LTB) measured by blood-based markers like circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating tumor cells (CTCs), and tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs). Promising data suggest that LTB assessment may refine patient selection for MDT and systemic treatment. These findings suggest potential for a combined approach of MDT and systemic therapy in oligometastatic prostate cancer (omPC).</p>","PeriodicalId":8216,"journal":{"name":"Annals of translational medicine","volume":"13 3","pages":"29"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12272797/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Deferral of systemic therapy in patients with oligorecurrent prostate cancer treated with metastasis-directed radiotherapy.\",\"authors\":\"Miguel Muniz, Daniel S Childs, Jack Andrews, Ahmed M Mahmoud, Sean Park, Oliver Sartor, Adam M Kase, Irbaz B Riaz, Bradley J Stish, Aadel A Chaudhuri, Pradeep S Chauhan, Ryan Phillips, Fabrice Lucien, Jacob J Orme\",\"doi\":\"10.21037/atm-24-187\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Distant metastasis marks a critical transition in prostate cancer, separating potentially curable from canonically incurable disease. Oligometastatic disease, defined as limited metastases (e.g., less than 3, 5, or 10), can encompass different clinical scenarios, including oligorecurrent disease (characterized by a limited number of metastatic lesions that recur after initial definitive treatment), and has emerged as an intermediate or transitional state. While intensified systemic therapies are increasingly applied to metastatic cases, many patients prefer to delay starting castrating therapies. Metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) is a safe and effective alternative to systemic therapy in a subset of patients with well-defined oligometastatic disease. Recent advances in imaging technologies and emerging treatment paradigms pose clinical challenges for patient risk stratification and optimal treatment selection. Here, we explore two key developments in the field: the influence of advanced imaging on clinical decision-making and the growing role of radiotherapy (RT) in oligometastatic disease management. We explore the landscape of novel biomarkers to estimate micrometastatic disease burden, which eludes imaging, using the concept of \\\"liquid tumor burden\\\" (LTB) measured by blood-based markers like circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating tumor cells (CTCs), and tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs). Promising data suggest that LTB assessment may refine patient selection for MDT and systemic treatment. 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Deferral of systemic therapy in patients with oligorecurrent prostate cancer treated with metastasis-directed radiotherapy.
Distant metastasis marks a critical transition in prostate cancer, separating potentially curable from canonically incurable disease. Oligometastatic disease, defined as limited metastases (e.g., less than 3, 5, or 10), can encompass different clinical scenarios, including oligorecurrent disease (characterized by a limited number of metastatic lesions that recur after initial definitive treatment), and has emerged as an intermediate or transitional state. While intensified systemic therapies are increasingly applied to metastatic cases, many patients prefer to delay starting castrating therapies. Metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) is a safe and effective alternative to systemic therapy in a subset of patients with well-defined oligometastatic disease. Recent advances in imaging technologies and emerging treatment paradigms pose clinical challenges for patient risk stratification and optimal treatment selection. Here, we explore two key developments in the field: the influence of advanced imaging on clinical decision-making and the growing role of radiotherapy (RT) in oligometastatic disease management. We explore the landscape of novel biomarkers to estimate micrometastatic disease burden, which eludes imaging, using the concept of "liquid tumor burden" (LTB) measured by blood-based markers like circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating tumor cells (CTCs), and tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs). Promising data suggest that LTB assessment may refine patient selection for MDT and systemic treatment. These findings suggest potential for a combined approach of MDT and systemic therapy in oligometastatic prostate cancer (omPC).
期刊介绍:
The Annals of Translational Medicine (Ann Transl Med; ATM; Print ISSN 2305-5839; Online ISSN 2305-5847) is an international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal featuring original and observational investigations in the broad fields of laboratory, clinical, and public health research, aiming to provide practical up-to-date information in significant research from all subspecialties of medicine and to broaden the readers’ vision and horizon from bench to bed and bed to bench. It is published quarterly (April 2013- Dec. 2013), monthly (Jan. 2014 - Feb. 2015), biweekly (March 2015-) and openly distributed worldwide. Annals of Translational Medicine is indexed in PubMed in Sept 2014 and in SCIE in 2018. Specific areas of interest include, but not limited to, multimodality therapy, epidemiology, biomarkers, imaging, biology, pathology, and technical advances related to medicine. Submissions describing preclinical research with potential for application to human disease, and studies describing research obtained from preliminary human experimentation with potential to further the understanding of biological mechanism underlying disease are encouraged. Also warmly welcome are studies describing public health research pertinent to clinic, disease diagnosis and prevention, or healthcare policy. With a focus on interdisciplinary academic cooperation, ATM aims to expedite the translation of scientific discovery into new or improved standards of management and health outcomes practice.