Dr. Petrylak on PSMA ADC for Patients with mCRPC

Video

Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, director, Prostate and GU Medical Oncology, Yale Cancer Center, discusses the results of a phase II trial that examined prostate specific membrane antigen antibody drug conjugate (PSMA ADC) in taxane-treated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients.

Daniel P. Petrylak, MD, director, Prostate and GU Medical Oncology, Yale Cancer Center, discusses the results of a phase II trial that examined prostate specific membrane antigen antibody drug conjugate (PSMA ADC) in taxane-treated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients.

Petrylak says these patients were given 2.5 mg/kg of PSMA ADC for three weeks. This dose was found to be too high in some patients and was reduced to 2.3 mg/kg. Safety, tumor response by PSA, circulating tumor cells (CTC), imaging, biomarkers and clinical progression were assessed during the study.

The results of this phase II study showed that the patients who expressed PSMA on circulating tumor cells and had a lack of neuroendocrine markers responded to the antibody, Petrylak says. The drug was fairly well tolerated: only some instances of neutropenia and peripheral neuropathy were reported.

Petrylak says a second cohort of patients that are naïve to chemotherapy is undergoing analysis.

Related Videos
Jeremy M. Pantin, MD, clinical director, Adult Transplant and Cellular Therapy Program, TriStar Centennial Medical Center, bone marrow transplant physician, Sarah Cannon Research Institute
Maria Hafez, MD, assistant professor, breast and sarcoma medical oncologist, director, Clinical Breast Cancer Research, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University
Zeynep Eroglu, MD
Sundar Jagannath, MBBS, director, Center of Excellence for Multiple Myeloma, professor of medicine (hematology and medical oncology), The Tisch Cancer Institute, Mount Sinai
Akriti Jain, MD
Raj Singh, MD
Gottfried Konecny, MD
Karim Chamie, MD, associate professor, urology, the University of California, Los Angeles
Mike Lattanzi, MD, medical oncologist, Texas Oncology
Ramez N. Eskander, MD