New Advances in Prostate Cancer in 2025
January 23, 2025Yale Cancer Center Grand Rounds | January 21, 2025
Presented by: Dr. William Oh
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- 00:00Roy Herbst. Really excited to
- 00:01introduce our ground round speaker
- 00:03today.
- 00:04A special pleasure to introduce
- 00:06doctor William Oh,
- 00:07who's just joined us. I
- 00:09can tell you, Eric has
- 00:11just texted me and,
- 00:12wanted me to emphasize how
- 00:14excited, he and we all
- 00:15are to have William here.
- 00:17As you'll see as I
- 00:18introduce him, he certainly has
- 00:19a tremendous background, and he'll
- 00:21be a a great addition.
- 00:23Doctor O, he's
- 00:25now the director of precision
- 00:26medicine for the Yale Cancer
- 00:27Center
- 00:28and Smile Cancer Hospital.
- 00:30He'll be very involved in
- 00:31in in some of that
- 00:32work and including our precision
- 00:34medicine tumor board, and he's
- 00:36importantly the service line medical
- 00:38director of Smile Cancer Hospital
- 00:39at Greenwich.
- 00:41He received his medical degree
- 00:42from NYU.
- 00:44He was actually a Yale
- 00:45undergraduate in,
- 00:46BS in
- 00:48molecular biophysics and biochemistry, and
- 00:49did his internship and residency,
- 00:51at the Brigham Women's Hospital
- 00:53and and his clinical fellowship
- 00:54at the, Dana Farber, which
- 00:56is where I first met
- 00:57him.
- 00:58Before being at Yale, he
- 01:00was the chief medical officer
- 01:01and executive vice president of
- 01:03the Prostate Cancer Foundation.
- 01:04We focused on barriers to
- 01:06delivery of care for prostate
- 01:08cancer nationally.
- 01:10William is a genitourinary
- 01:11oncologist
- 01:13truly with decades of experience
- 01:14caring for patients with prostate
- 01:15cancer.
- 01:16For over a decade, he
- 01:17was chief of hematology and
- 01:19medical oncology,
- 01:20deputy director of the, Tisch
- 01:22Cancer Institute and NCI designated
- 01:24center, and the Ezra Greenspan
- 01:26professor of clinical cancer,
- 01:28therapeutics
- 01:29at the Icahn Medical School.
- 01:31That's Mount Sinai.
- 01:33He has a number of
- 01:34national,
- 01:35you know,
- 01:36roles that are quite relevant.
- 01:38He's chair of the American
- 01:39Cancer Society's National Prostate Cancer
- 01:41Roundtable,
- 01:42whose mission is to improve
- 01:43prostate cancer outcomes and survivorship
- 01:45through increasing awareness and equitable
- 01:47access to prevention, screening, and
- 01:48treatment.
- 01:49He's also chair of the
- 01:50medical advisory council for the
- 01:52Chemotherapy Foundation.
- 01:54So, what better way to
- 01:55welcome William to Yale to
- 01:57have him give grand rounds.
- 01:59He's also part of the
- 02:00QU division. I think Dan
- 02:02Petrak, I know, is online,
- 02:04from a meeting he's at,
- 02:05and he's gonna talk to
- 02:06us about new advances in
- 02:07prostate cancer in twenty twenty
- 02:09five. William, thank
- 02:13you. Well, thank you, Roy,
- 02:14and thank you all for
- 02:15the welcome.
- 02:20Let's see here.
- 02:23These are my disclosures.
- 02:28I wanted to talk a
- 02:29little bit about my journey
- 02:30here.
- 02:32I actually worked with Roy
- 02:34as a resident. He doesn't
- 02:35remember that, but we were
- 02:37residents together. He was a
- 02:38year ahead of me. And
- 02:39then subsequently with Eric at
- 02:40the Dana Farber and many
- 02:41friends. This was really key
- 02:43to part of my journey
- 02:44because as I moved on
- 02:46in my career,
- 02:48as you heard, I went
- 02:49to Mount Sinai about fifteen
- 02:51years ago
- 02:51to build a new cancer
- 02:52center in New York City,
- 02:54and, ultimately,
- 02:56we did get NCI designation
- 02:57and and renewed it.
- 02:59A part of my goal
- 03:00in life was to figure
- 03:02out how we actually deliver
- 03:03this care better to our
- 03:04patients because so much was
- 03:05happening and is happening.
- 03:07So I left,
- 03:09my my administrative roles to
- 03:11join a company called Semaphore,
- 03:12which was a spin out
- 03:13of of Mount Sinai, which
- 03:14was really using genomics, but
- 03:16really more importantly, clinical data
- 03:17and AI to try
- 03:19to improve
- 03:20the way we deliver care
- 03:21to patients. And, this will
- 03:23come up a little bit
- 03:24in in my decision really
- 03:26to come back to academia,
- 03:28to use information and data
- 03:30to better take care of
- 03:31our patients.
- 03:33It's a long story, but,
- 03:34after two years at, a
- 03:36publicly traded company, I I
- 03:37joined, the Prostate Cancer Foundation
- 03:39as the chief medical officer,
- 03:41and I'll talk a little
- 03:42bit about the work that
- 03:43I did there, in today's
- 03:45talk. But it all leads
- 03:46to, I think, a real
- 03:48opportunity for me to have
- 03:49joined,
- 03:50the Yale Cancer Center and
- 03:51Smilow
- 03:52to talk about work that,
- 03:54really in two big domains.
- 03:55One is, of course, prostate
- 03:57cancer, which I'm gonna be
- 03:58focusing on today, and the
- 03:59second is how we deliver
- 04:01the care better, not just
- 04:02in prostate cancer, but to
- 04:03all cancer patients, and that's
- 04:05really that title around precision
- 04:06medicine.
- 04:08But today, I'm gonna focus
- 04:09on prostate cancer.
- 04:11These are the newest data
- 04:12from the American Cancer Society
- 04:13about the burden. It is
- 04:15the number one cancer in
- 04:16men. Really, by far, thirty
- 04:17percent of all pros all
- 04:19cancers are are prostate cancer.
- 04:21And,
- 04:22interestingly, even though we sometimes
- 04:23have a belief that prostate
- 04:24cancer is not lethal, it's
- 04:26still the second leading cause
- 04:27of cancer death. Not only
- 04:29that, the death rate is
- 04:30actually rising.
- 04:31This is as of twenty
- 04:32twenty five.
- 04:36Here's the incidence rates, and
- 04:37it this is, again, really
- 04:39hot off the press. And
- 04:40you can see this very
- 04:41sharp, increase in the, incidence
- 04:43of prostate cancer. This is
- 04:45in in and of itself
- 04:46quite an interesting conversation about
- 04:48why
- 04:49it's risen so sharply in
- 04:50the past decade.
- 04:52And we can talk a
- 04:53little bit more in the
- 04:53q and a about what
- 04:55the in implications there. And
- 04:56you can see the parallel
- 04:57in breast cancer, the breast
- 04:58cancer incidence rates rising.
- 05:03But the death rate from
- 05:04prostate cancer has, in fact,
- 05:06plateaued,
- 05:07and there's a lot of
- 05:07reasons to be concerned about
- 05:08this plateau. You know, early
- 05:10when I started in this
- 05:11field about, twenty five years
- 05:13ago, I thought the prostate
- 05:14cancer would actually if you
- 05:16see this drop that that
- 05:17you can see on this
- 05:18graph, I thought prostate cancer
- 05:19would fall below colo colorectal
- 05:21and other can cancer death
- 05:23rates, but in fact, it
- 05:24has plateaued and in as
- 05:25I mentioned, it's slowly rising.
- 05:27Of course, lung cancer death
- 05:28rates have gone down dramatically
- 05:29in men since, the surgeon
- 05:31general's report around, around cigarette
- 05:34smoking.
- 05:35And these are some of
- 05:36the data that have recently
- 05:38come out about why we're
- 05:39concerned about the death rate
- 05:41actually rising.
- 05:42If you look at,
- 05:44the rates of, cancer, you
- 05:45can see again that rise
- 05:47both both in all groups,
- 05:49but also specifically in black
- 05:50men who are denoted by
- 05:52the green dots here. But
- 05:54particularly, I wanna point out,
- 05:55this this graph, the the
- 05:57distant, metastatic disease, and you
- 05:59can see two things here.
- 06:01One is the rate of
- 06:02metastatic prostate cancer is growing
- 06:04quite dramatically over the past
- 06:05decade.
- 06:07And one question is why?
- 06:08This is in the US.
- 06:09This is not worldwide. This
- 06:10is in a country where
- 06:11you could see that, that
- 06:12rates of metastatic disease were
- 06:14dramatically
- 06:15dropping before,
- 06:17before this point. So what's
- 06:19happened over the past decade?
- 06:20And then you still see
- 06:21this huge disparity between black
- 06:23men and all other races.
- 06:25And this is gonna get
- 06:26at some of the work
- 06:27that I did, particularly at
- 06:27the prostate cancer foundation.
- 06:30But, I think a lot
- 06:31of us are concerned about
- 06:32these these trends about and
- 06:33about how we reverse them.
- 06:36Also last year, the Lancet
- 06:38Commission published a report
- 06:40about worldwide rates of of
- 06:42prostate cancer. And what we
- 06:43know is that over the
- 06:44next twenty years or so,
- 06:46from twenty twenty to twenty,
- 06:48forty, you can see in
- 06:49the in the corners here,
- 06:50the rates of
- 06:52prostate cancer will double. So
- 06:54the number of new cases
- 06:55will double, and the number
- 06:56of deaths will increase by
- 06:57eighty five percent. And you
- 06:59can see a lot of
- 06:59it is driven in the
- 07:01orange
- 07:01bars by by East Asia,
- 07:04South America,
- 07:06and, and other parts of
- 07:07the world. So we're seeing
- 07:08both an increase in incidence,
- 07:10but also,
- 07:11a significant increase in death
- 07:12rates. And, again, we can
- 07:14debate and discuss some of
- 07:15the underlying causes of this.
- 07:17This is not just a
- 07:18detection issue. This is a
- 07:20a a a true concern,
- 07:21especially in an era where
- 07:22we have so many new
- 07:23therapies, which is what I'm
- 07:24gonna shift my talk to.
- 07:27So I'm gonna talk about
- 07:29five different areas today.
- 07:31I know that's a lot
- 07:31to cover in a forty
- 07:33five, fifty minute talk, but
- 07:34I wanna I'm gonna go
- 07:35through these because I wanted
- 07:36to just give you a
- 07:37sense of how much new
- 07:39information and new data and
- 07:40new treatments are really happening.
- 07:42But I'm gonna start with
- 07:43this idea that screening
- 07:45is bad for prostate cancer.
- 07:46And this is unfortunately
- 07:48something that has, taken
- 07:50hold and may be explaining
- 07:52some of the epidemiologic trends
- 07:53that you're seeing.
- 07:55What is risk adapted screening?
- 07:56Well, I think part of
- 07:58this is,
- 08:00conveyed by a very famous,
- 08:02urologist who is a chair
- 08:03of urology at, Memorial Sloan
- 08:05Kettering for many years, and,
- 08:06unfortunately, himself died of prostate
- 08:08cancer. But he had a
- 08:09lot of, wisdom that he
- 08:11would talk about. One was,
- 08:13he said, growing old is
- 08:14invariably fatal. Prostate cancer is
- 08:16less so. This gets to,
- 08:18from the nineteen seventies and
- 08:19eighties, the idea that not
- 08:20all prostate cancers are lethal.
- 08:23The other, thing that he
- 08:24said is, is cure possible
- 08:26for though in those for
- 08:27whom it is necessary, and
- 08:28is cure necessary
- 08:30for those in whom it
- 08:31is possible? What he's talking
- 08:32about is the heterogeneity of
- 08:33prostate cancer means that some
- 08:35men should be left alone
- 08:37to live their lives without
- 08:38intervention, and other men, no
- 08:40matter what we do, may
- 08:41progress and die of their
- 08:42disease. So when you think
- 08:43of a disease with such
- 08:44heterogeneity,
- 08:45how do we apply the
- 08:46right treatments and the right
- 08:48solutions to each of these
- 08:49patients?
- 08:51So we we wrote an
- 08:52editorial. This is Sigrid Carlson
- 08:54and I really talking about,
- 08:56screening guidelines, and and you
- 08:58don't you're not meant to
- 08:59read this. I can tell
- 09:00you just just that all
- 09:02of the major organizations that
- 09:03actually put out screening guidelines,
- 09:06put out slightly different ones.
- 09:08So this is very complicated
- 09:09and unfortunately on the line.
- 09:11Now most primary care doctors
- 09:12and most insurance companies,
- 09:14fund the recommendations of the
- 09:15US Preventative Services Task Force,
- 09:17but the AUA,
- 09:18the American Cancer Society, the
- 09:20American Society of Clinical Oncology,
- 09:22NCCN, they all put out
- 09:23different guidelines. And you can
- 09:24see if you dig into
- 09:26this editorial that, unfortunately, all
- 09:28of the guidelines differ slightly.
- 09:31And, you know, who's not
- 09:32gonna be confused when you
- 09:33see all of this, variation
- 09:35in terms of the the
- 09:36guidelines?
- 09:38So when I joined the
- 09:39Prostate Cancer Foundation a few
- 09:40years ago, even though I'm
- 09:42a medical oncologist
- 09:43and I don't necessarily screen
- 09:45patients, I I asked the
- 09:46question, where can I make
- 09:47the biggest difference in terms
- 09:49of,
- 09:50reducing mortality from from from
- 09:52prostate cancer? So one of
- 09:53the first areas was this
- 09:54concept of risk adapted screening.
- 09:56So we know, as I
- 09:57showed you in that earlier
- 09:59epidemiologic
- 10:00graph, black men are one
- 10:01of the groups that has
- 10:03the highest rate of both
- 10:04diagnosis and death from cancer,
- 10:06and you can see that
- 10:06here. They actually have about
- 10:08a two point two fold
- 10:09higher risk of dying of
- 10:10prostate cancer. They present at
- 10:12younger ages, they have more
- 10:13aggressive disease, and are more
- 10:14likely to be diagnosed with
- 10:16advanced disease.
- 10:17So these racial disparities clearly
- 10:19exist, and this is clearly
- 10:20a population at risk.
- 10:22Now, there's an interesting conversation
- 10:24about the biology and genetics
- 10:26behind this and whether this
- 10:27is truly an access issue,
- 10:29a socioeconomic issue, or if
- 10:30it's truly a biological issue.
- 10:32But the bottom line is
- 10:33the self reported black men
- 10:35have the highest rates of
- 10:36dying of prostate cancer, in
- 10:37the United States and and
- 10:39actually in the world.
- 10:40So what we did was
- 10:41we simply created a,
- 10:43an expert group, a panel
- 10:45here,
- 10:46to review the evidence.
- 10:48Now the issue is that
- 10:49if you try to only,
- 10:51limit that evidence to randomized
- 10:53phase three trials, you'll be,
- 10:55very disappointed because of the
- 10:57three randomized trials that have
- 10:59looked at screening, only five
- 11:00percent of one of the
- 11:01three trials actually had, black
- 11:04men enrolled. So here's a
- 11:05high risk population who have
- 11:07just not been studied. So
- 11:08is the absence of evidence,
- 11:10does that mean that we
- 11:11shouldn't actually make recommendations that
- 11:13directly impact this population? And
- 11:15we decided no. We said
- 11:16we were gonna look at
- 11:17all the evidence, but include
- 11:18evidence that included
- 11:20modeling evidence and observational data.
- 11:23So this paper was published
- 11:24in the NEJM Evidence last
- 11:25year, and it asked six
- 11:27questions. You know, should black
- 11:28men be screened?
- 11:30What should they know about
- 11:31screening? At what age and
- 11:32so on? And I'm not
- 11:33gonna go into detail about
- 11:35all this, but, basically,
- 11:36most men are recommended to
- 11:37have screening at the age
- 11:38of fifty to fifty five.
- 11:40And even though the guidelines
- 11:42have always put a black
- 11:43man into an asterisk category,
- 11:45we took it out of
- 11:46the asterisk, and we just
- 11:47basically said black men should
- 11:48get a baseline PSA between
- 11:50the ages of forty and
- 11:51forty five, and they should
- 11:52also get annual screening. I
- 11:54think there's a real opportunity,
- 11:56certainly nationally,
- 11:57but also here, within the,
- 12:00the Yale network to really
- 12:01think about how we can
- 12:02have an impact on on
- 12:03patients who are at the
- 12:04highest risk of both getting
- 12:06prostate cancer but also dying
- 12:07of it.
- 12:10But as I mentioned earlier,
- 12:12some of the challenges here
- 12:13are how do we actually
- 12:14deliver this care.
- 12:15So, when I left PCF,
- 12:18really, it was to, as
- 12:19I thought about coming back
- 12:21to an academic medical center,
- 12:22it really requires this kind
- 12:24of partnership, really community leaders
- 12:25and academic centers. And I
- 12:27think that, one of the
- 12:29organizations that I've been fortunate
- 12:30to be asked to to
- 12:31join and lead is the
- 12:33ACS National Prostate Cancer Roundtable.
- 12:36And the idea really is
- 12:37to think about projects that
- 12:38will actually impact,
- 12:40the disease in the exact
- 12:42way that I I first
- 12:43started when I joined PCF.
- 12:45And so this started in
- 12:46September. More to come on
- 12:47this, and I'd love to
- 12:49interact with the community here
- 12:50to think about ways in
- 12:51which we can actually,
- 12:53address this at risk population.
- 12:54There are other at risk
- 12:55populations. For example, those with
- 12:57a family history or genetic
- 12:58risk, Not gonna have a
- 12:59chance to talk about that
- 13:00today, but I think that
- 13:02implementation is key. You can
- 13:04get all the great drugs
- 13:05in the world. You can
- 13:06have all these fancy new
- 13:07bi diagnostic tests. But if
- 13:08patients who
- 13:10can have access to a
- 13:11basic basically, a fifty dollar
- 13:13test can actually learn if
- 13:15they might have, a lethal
- 13:16cancer, I think that the
- 13:17answer is to try to
- 13:18to find those patients.
- 13:21Okay. So we're gonna switch
- 13:22to, more advanced disease. And,
- 13:24of course, this is the
- 13:25other way in which patients
- 13:27progress and unfortunately die of
- 13:29the disease. And I'm gonna
- 13:29first talk about androgen receptor
- 13:31pathway inhibitors, what I call
- 13:33the first targeted therapy. You
- 13:34know, we talk about targeted
- 13:35therapy now. We have all
- 13:36these fancy,
- 13:38biomarkers. But in truth, androgen
- 13:40receptor
- 13:41is one of the key
- 13:42first,
- 13:43pathways.
- 13:44And you can see here
- 13:45that,
- 13:46in pink are four,
- 13:48what we call ARPs or
- 13:49androgen receptor pathway inhibitors that
- 13:50are proven to improve survival
- 13:52in multiple disease states within
- 13:54the treatment landscape of prostate
- 13:55cancer.
- 13:57But this history goes back
- 13:58many years. In fact, there
- 13:59have been at least two
- 14:00Nobel prizes awarded for the
- 14:02discovery that androgen was a
- 14:03driver of prostate cancer. Now
- 14:05in twenty twenty five, we
- 14:06think it's obvious that androgen
- 14:08drives prostate cancer. But back
- 14:09when, doctor Huggins
- 14:11first did orchiectomies,
- 14:13in patients with metastatic prostate
- 14:15cancer, it was not obvious
- 14:16that prostate cancer was driven
- 14:18by testosterone and and androgen
- 14:20receptor.
- 14:21And this is a long
- 14:22history. The second,
- 14:24Nobel Prize, by the way,
- 14:25was for the chemical synthesis
- 14:27of LHRH.
- 14:28And the idea here really
- 14:29is that this is a
- 14:30big disease for which this
- 14:32observation has not only led
- 14:34to a long standing
- 14:36treatment, which we still use,
- 14:37so we don't use orchiectomy
- 14:39here in the United States.
- 14:40It's still used worldwide as
- 14:41a very inexpensive way to
- 14:43deprive the cancer of its
- 14:44ligand. But LHRH agonists and
- 14:46antagonists remain a mainstay of
- 14:48treatment, basically, androgen deprivation.
- 14:51But what really have we
- 14:52learned, when I started in
- 14:54this field, we said, you
- 14:55know what? We we gave
- 14:56the patient luprolide. Their testosterone
- 14:58went down. We're done. We've
- 14:59maximized it. It turned out
- 15:01that we were completely wrong.
- 15:03And the reason we were
- 15:04completely wrong is that androgen
- 15:06continued to be an important
- 15:07driver of these cancers.
- 15:09And we now know that
- 15:10there are at least,
- 15:12four drugs in this category
- 15:14of ARPII that block the
- 15:16continued signaling of an androgen
- 15:19in these cancer cells. And
- 15:20they are listed here, abiraterone,
- 15:23apalutamide, darolutamide, and enzalutamide.
- 15:25We also know that chemotherapy
- 15:26has an impact when these
- 15:28cancers first present. We we've
- 15:29known that for a while,
- 15:30but in fact, when you
- 15:31move it early into the
- 15:33presentation
- 15:34of metastatic prostate cancer, you
- 15:36can target this heterogeneity. Heterogeneity
- 15:38implies that these cancer cells
- 15:40are not uniform monoclonal like
- 15:42some leukemias may be. There
- 15:43are these different colored cancer
- 15:45cells.
- 15:46They're not really colored in
- 15:46real life, but, but they
- 15:48are driven by different driver
- 15:50mutations or abnormalities or sensitivity
- 15:53to androgen signaling.
- 15:54And if you have a
- 15:55better androgen androgen signaling inhibitor,
- 15:58or chemotherapy that you can
- 16:00actually improve survival in these
- 16:01patients.
- 16:02And there have now been
- 16:03eleven prospective clinical trials. This
- 16:05is one of the most
- 16:06studied and most effective randomized,
- 16:09stories that exist in modern
- 16:11oncology.
- 16:12Okay? Eleven randomized clinical trials
- 16:14that show survival benefit for
- 16:16combination therapy in metastatic
- 16:18hormone sensitive prostate cancer. So
- 16:20we call this HSBC or
- 16:21hormone sensitive prostate cancer because
- 16:23we know that if we
- 16:24actually deprive these patients of
- 16:26androgen, as I showed you
- 16:27with doctor Huggins, we can
- 16:28put these cancers into remission.
- 16:30But those patients would recur
- 16:31within a year or two.
- 16:33But what we've shown with
- 16:34all of these clinical trials
- 16:35is that if you do
- 16:36doublets where you add an
- 16:38ARPI to androgen deprivation therapy
- 16:40or you do triplets where
- 16:41you add an ARPI plus
- 16:43chemotherapy,
- 16:44that you can actually improve
- 16:45survival, and you can see
- 16:46the hazard ratios there.
- 16:49You can improve survival by
- 16:50up to twenty to forty
- 16:51percent. And all of these
- 16:52studies were positive.
- 16:54So the the question is
- 16:55not if these drugs work.
- 16:56The question is, is there
- 16:58an optimal sequence? Is there
- 16:59one drug better than the
- 17:00other? But we're not gonna
- 17:01talk about that. We're gonna
- 17:02talk about the fact that
- 17:03all of these trials, including
- 17:04one that didn't even make
- 17:05it to this review article
- 17:07and was presented very recently,
- 17:09all show that these drugs
- 17:10should absolutely be used to
- 17:12improve survival.
- 17:14So, you know, when I
- 17:15give talks to patients,
- 17:16you know, I try to
- 17:17make the story simple. Right?
- 17:18So ADT alone, going back
- 17:20to the nineteen forties, androgen
- 17:22deprivation alone, therapy alone was
- 17:24the standard of care.
- 17:26Then in the past few
- 17:28years, if you look at
- 17:28that graphic, we showed that
- 17:30chemotherapy
- 17:31plus,
- 17:32ADT or an r one
- 17:34RP plus, ADT improved survival.
- 17:37So two drugs were better
- 17:38than one.
- 17:40Now the triplets showed that
- 17:42if you add,
- 17:43a third drug
- 17:44together, if you add ADT
- 17:46plus docetaxel on either abiraterone
- 17:48or dalutamide, you improve survival.
- 17:50So, actually, these two options
- 17:51should really be off the
- 17:52table now, and you'd be
- 17:54surprised.
- 17:55A lot of patients, in
- 17:56fact,
- 17:57do not receive,
- 17:58these three options here. And
- 18:00these options are widely available,
- 18:02and we can talk again
- 18:03about why they're not always
- 18:04used. But sometimes it's the
- 18:06doctors themselves, maybe not in
- 18:07academic centers like ours, but
- 18:09in the community who may
- 18:10or may not appreciate,
- 18:12how important these drugs are
- 18:13in terms of overall survival.
- 18:15If you can live forty
- 18:16percent longer with these treatments,
- 18:18why wouldn't you give these
- 18:19treatments?
- 18:20So they've asked that question
- 18:22in real world studies, and,
- 18:24this includes mostly,
- 18:25US studies, but also studies
- 18:27from other countries. And you
- 18:28can see that,
- 18:30adding one of these drugs,
- 18:31either Dositax or one of
- 18:33these,
- 18:34it's called the RC here,
- 18:35but I mean ARP,
- 18:36the one of these extra
- 18:37drugs improve,
- 18:39were were more likely to
- 18:40be used in white patients,
- 18:42younger patients, in academic centers,
- 18:44and more likely by oncologists
- 18:45and neurologists.
- 18:46But if you look at
- 18:47this graph that was published,
- 18:49it looks like we're doing
- 18:50pretty well. But if in
- 18:51fact, if you actually put
- 18:52it on scale, this is
- 18:53what it really looks like.
- 18:54So we're we're lucky to
- 18:56get to fifty percent. At
- 18:57at at the time this
- 18:58was published, which was just
- 18:59last year, it was only,
- 19:01it was only about, thirty
- 19:03to forty percent were receiving
- 19:04a second drug.
- 19:05Okay. So this again gets
- 19:07to the same point I
- 19:08brought up earlier about implementation.
- 19:10We can get all these
- 19:11great drugs, but if patients
- 19:12aren't receiving it, they're not
- 19:13getting the survival benefit.
- 19:16And I wanna call out,
- 19:18that there are other drugs
- 19:19coming down this pike, including
- 19:21work
- 19:21developed here at Yale by
- 19:23Craig Cruz, the concept of
- 19:24PROTACs,
- 19:25AR degraders, and led by
- 19:26Dan Petrelac in the original
- 19:28clinical trials. And this was
- 19:29pub presented last year at
- 19:31ASCO, and you can see
- 19:32that this,
- 19:33PROTAC that degrades AR,
- 19:35specifically in patients who have,
- 19:37mutations in the ligand binding
- 19:38domain, it's beyond the scope
- 19:40of this discussion. But these
- 19:41are patients who do not
- 19:42respond to the current,
- 19:44AR, PIs that we have
- 19:46at this time. And you
- 19:47can see these waterfall plots,
- 19:48you see quite a dramatic
- 19:51benefit to the use of
- 19:52a degrader. So we're gonna
- 19:54continue to see androgen signaling
- 19:56as an important target for
- 19:58anticancer therapy and prostate cancer.
- 20:00So here's a a story
- 20:02that has evolved over not
- 20:04just a few decades, but
- 20:05over
- 20:06almost a century. We're coming,
- 20:08you know, in the next
- 20:09sixty, seventy, eighty years we've
- 20:10been using these treatments. But,
- 20:12we think we're done, but
- 20:13we keep getting better and
- 20:14better, and you're gonna see
- 20:15more of these drugs in
- 20:16that setting.
- 20:18Okay. So how else can
- 20:19we be better?
- 20:20You know, biomarkers are a
- 20:22hot topic. People talk about
- 20:23it all the time. That
- 20:24is the key to doing
- 20:26better precision medicine. Right? So
- 20:28I'm gonna talk a little
- 20:29bit about the story here
- 20:30in prostate cancer with regard
- 20:31to both molecular biomarkers and
- 20:33PARP inhibitors in particular.
- 20:36So, in this graphic, there's
- 20:38two areas that a biomarker
- 20:40that are biomarker driven, PARP
- 20:42inhibitors and pembrolizumab.
- 20:43And I'll just talk briefly
- 20:45about both.
- 20:46But this is an article
- 20:47from a few years ago
- 20:49that really shows the FDA
- 20:51approvals,
- 20:52over the last twenty years
- 20:54and how many of them
- 20:55are really biomarker driven. You
- 20:57can see that the blue
- 20:58are biomarker driven approvals.
- 21:00And I couldn't find a
- 21:01more recent updated version, but
- 21:03it's probably continued and even
- 21:04more so. And you can
- 21:06see that in in recent
- 21:07years, at least half of
- 21:08all drug approvals by the
- 21:09FDA are actually,
- 21:11have an associated biomarker. And
- 21:13what this really points out
- 21:13is prostate cancer is not
- 21:15prostate cancer. Lung cancer, we
- 21:16know that's the prototypical story.
- 21:18It's not lung cancer. It's
- 21:19EGFR mutated lung cancer or
- 21:21it's,
- 21:22it's,
- 21:23ROS fusion lung cancer. And
- 21:25the same thing is true
- 21:26in prostate cancer except that
- 21:28we have fewer clear biomarkers.
- 21:29But I just this is
- 21:30an interesting paper from,
- 21:33also, from last year from,
- 21:35from a a a prominent
- 21:37group that looked at the
- 21:38rates of molecularly driven treatment
- 21:40decisions. So this concept of
- 21:42targeted precision therapy.
- 21:44And we know that,
- 21:46precision
- 21:48tier one and tier two,
- 21:49mutations
- 21:50represent
- 21:51about,
- 21:52in twenty seventeen represented about
- 21:54nine percent of all patients
- 21:56presenting,
- 21:57across the board, all cancers.
- 21:59And that went up to
- 22:00thirty one point six percent,
- 22:02five years later.
- 22:03Okay? And similarly, the number
- 22:05of,
- 22:07undetermined,
- 22:08drivers or drivers without actionability
- 22:10went down by about half.
- 22:12So you might say, depending
- 22:13on your, you know, point
- 22:14of view in the world,
- 22:15are you a half full
- 22:16or half empty person?
- 22:19Going from nine percent to
- 22:20thirty one percent in just
- 22:21five years is pretty dramatic,
- 22:23but two thirds of patients
- 22:25still don't have actionable mutations
- 22:27if you do sequencing of
- 22:28their tumors.
- 22:29And this actually this paper
- 22:30came out of Memorial Sloan
- 22:31Kettering. So the question is,
- 22:33in the average community practice,
- 22:35you know, if they're not
- 22:35doing all of the sequencing,
- 22:36are they getting the benefit
- 22:38of these actionable mutations?
- 22:41It turns out prostate cancer
- 22:42is driven by,
- 22:44molecular alter alterations, most importantly,
- 22:46DNA damage repair mutations
- 22:48or DDR mutations. And you
- 22:49can see here, if you
- 22:50look at the mutations,
- 22:52BRCA two is the most
- 22:54common one. So this sometimes
- 22:56surprises patients because with BRCA,
- 22:58of course, BRCA was named
- 22:59after breast cancer, but this
- 23:01gene in prostate cancer patients
- 23:03is associated with,
- 23:05both a worse prognosis, earlier
- 23:07diagnosis,
- 23:07but also significant,
- 23:11significantly worse outcomes.
- 23:13And and if you look
- 23:14at these, about a quarter
- 23:16of patients with advanced prostate
- 23:17cancer or CRPC, castration resistant
- 23:19prostate cancer,
- 23:20have,
- 23:21a mutation in in one
- 23:23of these DNA damage repair
- 23:24mutations.
- 23:26Fifty percent of those are
- 23:27germline, meaning they inherited it
- 23:28from their mother or father,
- 23:29and fifty percent are, somatic,
- 23:31meaning they developed it, during
- 23:33their lifetime.
- 23:34One of the things that
- 23:35we've learned certainly from preclinical
- 23:37work is that there probably
- 23:39is a synergy between androgen
- 23:41signaling and and blocking androgen
- 23:42signaling
- 23:43and,
- 23:44and these DNA damage repair
- 23:46mutations.
- 23:47And, and so the the
- 23:49the hypothesis based on preclinical
- 23:51work was that combining
- 23:53an ARP with a PARP
- 23:54inhibitor would actually improve outcomes
- 23:57in patients with prostate cancer.
- 23:59So two trials three trials
- 24:01recently about a year ago,
- 24:03actually, a few years ago,
- 24:04have shown that,
- 24:05survival is improved if you
- 24:07actually combine a PARP inhibitor
- 24:09with,
- 24:09one of these androgen receptor
- 24:11pathway inhibitors. And this is
- 24:12one of the studies, PROPEL,
- 24:13which combined olaparib with abiraterone
- 24:16versus, placebo,
- 24:17plus abiraterone.
- 24:19And you can see that
- 24:20particularly in the BRCA sub
- 24:22mutated subset, a very significant
- 24:24improvement, in this case in
- 24:25overall survival.
- 24:27So we know that if
- 24:27you carry one of these
- 24:28mutations, you should be getting
- 24:30a PARP inhibitor. But more
- 24:31importantly, you should be getting
- 24:32it right up front. You
- 24:33shouldn't be getting it later.
- 24:35This this drug was approved,
- 24:37quite a number of years
- 24:38ago if you progressed after
- 24:39a drug like abiraterone.
- 24:41But now this these studies
- 24:42seem to suggest that you
- 24:43should be getting them right
- 24:44up front, right at the
- 24:45time of metastatic disease.
- 24:47And the second study that
- 24:48is really in flight right
- 24:49at this moment is Talopro
- 24:51two. Again, a a different
- 24:53PARP inhibitor called talazoparib,
- 24:55combined with enzalutamide versus placebo
- 24:57plus enzalutamide. Again, a very
- 24:59similar endpoint, which is, radiographic
- 25:01progression free survival. And you
- 25:02can see that in all
- 25:03patients, there is a benefit
- 25:05to,
- 25:06to the combo,
- 25:08but,
- 25:09more significant in HRR or,
- 25:12DDR deficient tumors.
- 25:14They did put out a
- 25:15press release that suggests that
- 25:16maybe this, this combination works
- 25:18in all comers. I think
- 25:19we have to wait and
- 25:20see, when that data is
- 25:22presented.
- 25:23So the FDA has now
- 25:24approved,
- 25:25at least three combinations that
- 25:26are listed here. I didn't
- 25:27show you the third study
- 25:28of niraparib.
- 25:30But what does this mean?
- 25:31This means that in patients
- 25:32certainly with a DNA damage
- 25:34repair mutation,
- 25:35most important one being BRCA
- 25:37one or two, that that
- 25:38these patients should receive a
- 25:40combination of an ARP plus
- 25:42a PARP inhibitor.
- 25:44But similar to the story
- 25:45I've been telling you before,
- 25:47people don't get tested. It
- 25:48is, this is a real
- 25:49world evidence study actually from
- 25:51the Flatiron Group that shows
- 25:52that about sixty percent of
- 25:54patients never get tested
- 25:56for these mutations.
- 25:57So as of now, in
- 25:58order to be a candidate,
- 25:59you have to be tested.
- 26:00And you can see that
- 26:01there was a little bit
- 26:02of a blip down during
- 26:03COVID. But in general, about
- 26:05six only about forty percent
- 26:07of patients nationally get tested
- 26:08for DNA damage repair mutations.
- 26:10So you if you don't
- 26:11get tested, you'll never be
- 26:12able to benefit from the
- 26:13treatment.
- 26:15Okay.
- 26:17I think, if we haven't
- 26:18had a PSMA PET talk
- 26:20in for this group, I
- 26:22I hope we do have
- 26:23one soon because it's completely
- 26:24transformed
- 26:25the way we treat these
- 26:26patients. I've been taking care
- 26:28of prostate cancer for twenty
- 26:29five years. PSMA PET has
- 26:31completely
- 26:32changed the way we visualize
- 26:33prostate cancer. Now this is
- 26:35a clinical states model that
- 26:36I've shown many years now.
- 26:38If you start present with
- 26:39clinically localized prostate cancer, you
- 26:41have, radical prostatectomy by doctor
- 26:43Kim and you you're cured
- 26:45or you get radiation and
- 26:46you're cured. But if you
- 26:47aren't and at least a
- 26:48third of patients are not
- 26:49cured,
- 26:50they go through these disease
- 26:51states going from left to
- 26:52right where,
- 26:54where you might have a
- 26:55rising PSA and then you
- 26:56develop metastatic disease like I
- 26:58talked about earlier, which is
- 26:59on the bottom there. At
- 27:00the top, though, there's this
- 27:01interesting state that we defined
- 27:03as nonmetastatic
- 27:04but hormone sensitive and then
- 27:06castration resistant. What does that
- 27:07mean nonmetastatic?
- 27:08Well, it doesn't mean that
- 27:09they don't have metastasis. It
- 27:10means that we can't see
- 27:11it with traditional scans like
- 27:13bone scan and CAT scan.
- 27:14That's really what it means.
- 27:15It means that our imaging
- 27:17was not able to detect
- 27:19what we knew that was,
- 27:20cancer progressing. How do we
- 27:22know that their cancers were
- 27:23progressing? Well, we have a
- 27:24biomarker that I started this
- 27:25whole conversation with PSA
- 27:27that even though it's very
- 27:28controversial as a as a
- 27:30biomarker
- 27:31for,
- 27:33for screening, it is not
- 27:34controversial at all as a
- 27:36biomarker for monitoring.
- 27:37We use it all the
- 27:38time to monitor whether patients
- 27:40are progressing or not. So
- 27:41as I said, we've actually
- 27:43gone through this state where
- 27:44we actually used to use
- 27:45bone scan and CT scan,
- 27:46but we've completely shifted to
- 27:48the use of PET scan
- 27:49with CT.
- 27:50Why? I at least I
- 27:52have. I was on a
- 27:52panel. I was sitting there,
- 27:54and I said, I don't
- 27:55do bone scans anymore. And,
- 27:57you know, prominent urologist,
- 27:59you know, kind of tried
- 28:00to berate me for it.
- 28:01But in truth, if I'm
- 28:03able to get a PSMA
- 28:04PET scan, it is far
- 28:05superior to what information I
- 28:07might get from a bone
- 28:08scan.
- 28:09Now PSMA is an interesting,
- 28:11transmembrane molecule because it's not
- 28:13just an imaging molecule, but
- 28:15it is a therapeutic one
- 28:16as I'll talk about in
- 28:17a second.
- 28:18It's, highly expressed in prostate
- 28:20cancer,
- 28:21but particularly,
- 28:22almost a thousand fold in
- 28:24metastatic disease.
- 28:25And one of the issues
- 28:26is that this this, new
- 28:27imaging agent became, you know,
- 28:29became available relatively recently.
- 28:31And you can see here,
- 28:32I I listed the timing
- 28:33when it became available, twenty
- 28:34twenty, twenty twenty one, twenty
- 28:36twenty three. These are three
- 28:37different types of PSMA reagents.
- 28:40And so in a very
- 28:40short time, we've put a
- 28:42lot of pressure on nuclear
- 28:43medicine to be able to
- 28:44get these scans for our
- 28:45patients because
- 28:46from the point of diagnosis
- 28:48all the way to the
- 28:49point of advanced disease, this
- 28:50is helping guide exactly where
- 28:52the cancer is in a
- 28:53much more sensitive and specific
- 28:54way than we were able
- 28:56to do with, with, imaging
- 28:58like bone scans or or
- 28:59CT scans alone.
- 29:01And, it is,
- 29:03not real it's it's expressed
- 29:04on other organs, particularly the
- 29:06salivary and lacrimal glands. You'll
- 29:07see on some of the
- 29:08images I show you, which
- 29:10is important because of the
- 29:11toxicity of drugs that target
- 29:12it. So they get dry
- 29:13mouth, for example,
- 29:15and the kidneys can also
- 29:16sometimes take up these, some
- 29:18of these drugs. But it
- 29:19is a really important and
- 29:21excellent target.
- 29:23So,
- 29:25so we we do know
- 29:26that that concept of nonmetastatic
- 29:28is a disappearing disease state.
- 29:31So there were drugs that
- 29:32were approved for nonmetastatic
- 29:34castration resistant prostate cancer. But
- 29:36in this study from the
- 29:37UCLA,
- 29:38when they looked at patients
- 29:39who are nonmetastatic,
- 29:41that is they didn't have
- 29:42cancer on a bone or
- 29:43CT scan and they did
- 29:44a PSMA PET,
- 29:46ninety six percent of them
- 29:47were ninety ninety eight percent
- 29:48of them actually had a
- 29:49positive PET scan. So how
- 29:51that's not nonmetastatic. It means
- 29:52that your old scan was
- 29:53no good.
- 29:54And so it is a
- 29:56disappearing disease state in in
- 29:57the advent of the PSMA
- 29:58era.
- 30:00There was a prior
- 30:02test that was available a
- 30:03few years before called fluciclovine.
- 30:05Fluciclovine is interesting because it
- 30:07is a metabolic scan. It's
- 30:08an amino acid, that,
- 30:11that was used that we
- 30:12were using before PSMA became
- 30:13widely available in the United
- 30:14States. And this was a
- 30:15head to head study comparing
- 30:17PSMA to fluciclovine.
- 30:19And you can see that
- 30:21PSMA was four point eight
- 30:23times more accurate in terms
- 30:24of detecting,
- 30:26detecting prostate cancer. So, again,
- 30:29you can't treat what you
- 30:31can't measure. Right? We have
- 30:32PSA. We can measure that.
- 30:34That's a very simple quick
- 30:35test that we can order
- 30:36on these patients. It's not
- 30:37perfect. It doesn't give us
- 30:38all the information. Certainly doesn't
- 30:40tell us where the cancer
- 30:41is, and that's why PSMA
- 30:44PET in particular has really
- 30:45transformed the way we think
- 30:46about this disease.
- 30:48And, this is a prelude
- 30:50to the the next section
- 30:52of my talk, which is
- 30:53really therapeutics.
- 30:54Because as you see on
- 30:55the left, you can see
- 30:55a patient with metastatic disease
- 30:57who has a positive PSMA
- 30:59PET scan. You can see
- 31:00the the areas in his
- 31:01bone,
- 31:02that light up.
- 31:03You can see the salivary
- 31:05glands up in the upper
- 31:06part of his head, and,
- 31:08and you can also see
- 31:09that his kidneys light up
- 31:10because it's being excreted through
- 31:11the kidneys, and some is,
- 31:13collecting in the bladder.
- 31:14On the right side, you
- 31:15see that,
- 31:16FDG PET, which has been
- 31:18around for many years and
- 31:19and really lights up in
- 31:20the with the advent of
- 31:21glucose
- 31:22and is very useful in
- 31:23diseases like lymphoma and lung
- 31:25cancer because those cancers are
- 31:27very proliferative and use quite
- 31:28a lot of glucose.
- 31:29That that sometimes,
- 31:31in traditionally, FDG PET was
- 31:33not useful in prostate cancer.
- 31:34Traditionally, we haven't used a
- 31:36lot of it, but you
- 31:36can see that, in fact,
- 31:38there are some cancers in
- 31:39including in this patient here
- 31:41where some of the cancer
- 31:42cells do express PSMA, but
- 31:44some don't, and they only
- 31:46express FDG. And that's as
- 31:47you'll see in a minute,
- 31:48that's a real issue as
- 31:49we learn more about,
- 31:51the use of these imaging
- 31:52tech techniques.
- 31:54So the last section of
- 31:55my talk is really gonna,
- 31:56focus on this era of
- 31:57targeted therapy. I already started
- 31:59by saying androgen receptor pathway
- 32:01inhibitors are targeted therapy, and
- 32:02that's true. But in fact,
- 32:04we're moving to, an era
- 32:06of radioligands,
- 32:07bispecifics, and beyond. So,
- 32:10so this is, really
- 32:12in in this case, I'm
- 32:13gonna talk about LU one
- 32:14seven seven PSMA,
- 32:16but we're also gonna talk
- 32:17about all the treatments that
- 32:19I think are are on
- 32:20their way. So this was
- 32:21a, New England Journal paper
- 32:23just three years ago now
- 32:24called the VISION study.
- 32:26And it really shows you
- 32:27how PSMA, in particular a
- 32:28ligand called PSMA six one
- 32:30seven, binds to the cancer
- 32:31cell and delivers
- 32:33a radioactive,
- 32:35payload. In this case, LU
- 32:36one seven seven. That's a
- 32:38a beta particle that is
- 32:39lethal. So remember the imaging
- 32:41I showed you earlier was
- 32:42just to see the pic
- 32:43where the cancer is. But
- 32:44if you put a attach
- 32:46it to a radio,
- 32:47ligand that actually,
- 32:49is in endocytosed by the
- 32:50tumor cell, then it destroys
- 32:52that that cancer cell. That's
- 32:53the idea. So it's like
- 32:54a smart bomb technology
- 32:56to take PSMA and then
- 32:58deliver,
- 32:59a radioactive particle.
- 33:01And this is a trial
- 33:02design. You had to just
- 33:04have one positive PSMA,
- 33:06PET lesion. And we can
- 33:07talk a little bit about
- 33:08the nuances of this, but
- 33:10this makes it very simple.
- 33:11When you're doing a large
- 33:12randomized trials, keep it simple.
- 33:14If you don't keep it
- 33:15simple, it's very hard to
- 33:16accrue patients.
- 33:17And the the advantage of
- 33:18this treatment is that the
- 33:20patients could have had it
- 33:21anywhere. It works wherever the
- 33:22cancer is. It works if
- 33:23it's in the bone, in
- 33:24the lymph nodes, in the
- 33:25liver, anywhere.
- 33:27And the patients were randomized.
- 33:29These are patients who had
- 33:30already received the standard of
- 33:31care at the time, which
- 33:32included chemotherapy with a taxane
- 33:35or, an ARPY,
- 33:36or both.
- 33:37And they were randomized to
- 33:39receive standard of care therapy,
- 33:40which was not further chemotherapy
- 33:42but anything else, versus this,
- 33:45treatment, l u one seven
- 33:46seven six PSMA.
- 33:47And you can see here,
- 33:49on the left, radiographic progression
- 33:51free survival,
- 33:52hazard ratio of point four
- 33:54zero,
- 33:55sixty percent reduction in risk
- 33:56of project progression. But more
- 33:58importantly, overall survival, point six
- 34:00two has a ratio, Forty
- 34:01percent improvement in overall survival.
- 34:03And we have seen some
- 34:04dramatic responses to patients with
- 34:06this treatment. It is, given
- 34:08here, and it is, it
- 34:09has transformed a lot of
- 34:10my patients',
- 34:12lives.
- 34:13It is not curative, at
- 34:14least in the states we're
- 34:15giving. Remember, we're giving it
- 34:17at very late stages right
- 34:18now.
- 34:19So we'll talk a little
- 34:20bit about, what's being done
- 34:21to move it forward.
- 34:23So if you look at
- 34:24PSA response, that's a very
- 34:26common way that we measure
- 34:28how efficacious a treatment is.
- 34:29And you can see that
- 34:30if you use,
- 34:32standard of care alone, about
- 34:33seven percent will have a
- 34:34fifty percent drop in PSA.
- 34:36But if you use this
- 34:37LU one seven seven,
- 34:39it's about forty six percent.
- 34:40So, again, this is not
- 34:41a treatment that works in
- 34:42every patient. We can talk
- 34:43about some of the nuances
- 34:44there, but this is a
- 34:45group of patients who had
- 34:46no other therapy available to
- 34:48them and who were likely
- 34:49to progress and die.
- 34:51And we definitely see exceptional
- 34:53responders. And what you see
- 34:54here in this patient is
- 34:55on the left side, his
- 34:56PSA was,
- 34:58eight hundred and eighty, and
- 34:59he had diffuse bone metastases
- 35:01as you can see there.
- 35:02And within, one month and
- 35:04then three months, which you
- 35:05see on the second to
- 35:06last and last panel, his
- 35:07PSA has gone down to
- 35:08thirty and his bones, his,
- 35:10PET scan is pretty much,
- 35:13clear,
- 35:14almost completely clear. And we've
- 35:15seen some complete responses with
- 35:17these treatments.
- 35:18So
- 35:19it is a smart way
- 35:20of delivering targeted radiopharmaceutical
- 35:22therapy.
- 35:23But as I mentioned in
- 35:24that earlier graphic where I
- 35:26showed it next to FTG
- 35:27PET, there are still patients,
- 35:29for example, who don't express
- 35:30PSMA. That's what you see
- 35:32in the left panel. Or
- 35:33patients who have discordance between
- 35:35PSMA and FDG,
- 35:37either in bone in the
- 35:38center panels or in the
- 35:39right. And you see I
- 35:40put PSMA at next to
- 35:41FDG in each of these,
- 35:43and you can see that
- 35:44in some patients, the FDG
- 35:45PET is showing tumors that
- 35:46don't make PSMA.
- 35:49This is also as probably
- 35:50a a a a way
- 35:51in which these cancer cells,
- 35:53you know, it's like the
- 35:54terminator. Sometimes you you you
- 35:55shrink them as many as
- 35:56you can, but the cancer
- 35:57cells that recur
- 35:59are don't express PSMA. And
- 36:00and this treatment will not
- 36:01work if your tumor cell
- 36:02does not make PSMA.
- 36:05The side effects are almost
- 36:06what you'd expect.
- 36:08Because it's a radiopharmaceutical,
- 36:10we see bone marrow suppression
- 36:11and fatigue.
- 36:12And the dry mouth is
- 36:13unique to this treatment because
- 36:15as I showed you in
- 36:16some of those graphics, you
- 36:17see this,
- 36:19this uptake in the salivary
- 36:20and, glands.
- 36:22So what about moving this
- 36:23treatment earlier? Like, why are
- 36:24we waiting until after the
- 36:25patient's progressed on chemotherapy and
- 36:27has the amount of disease
- 36:28I showed you? Well, that
- 36:30idea is obviously, moving forward.
- 36:31And this was a study
- 36:32called PSMA four. This is
- 36:34before chemotherapy.
- 36:36And you can see it's
- 36:37the same randomization.
- 36:38You could either get another
- 36:40ARPI or you could get,
- 36:41this LU one seven seven.
- 36:42And you see on the
- 36:43left side a very strong
- 36:45PSMA,
- 36:47PFS benefit. So really a
- 36:50doubling of the time it
- 36:51takes to progress.
- 36:52But on the right side,
- 36:53you don't really see an
- 36:54overall survival benefit. So this
- 36:56is one of the reasons
- 36:57that the FDA has not
- 36:58yet approved this. This study
- 36:59was presented, you can see
- 37:00here, in twenty twenty three.
- 37:01And we've seen this data
- 37:02for quite some time, but
- 37:03it's expected that the FDA
- 37:05will actually,
- 37:07probably approve this in patients
- 37:08who have not yet received
- 37:09chemotherapy. But it's, again, a
- 37:11subject we don't fully understand
- 37:13why are aren't these patients,
- 37:15benefiting in terms of overall
- 37:16survival.
- 37:17And then the other question
- 37:18is, you know, if if
- 37:19this is these are all
- 37:20patients with metastatic disease,
- 37:23why wait till they develop
- 37:24castration resistance? Why not just
- 37:26treat them upfront?
- 37:27And this was a study
- 37:28from your, Australia where they
- 37:30gave them two cycles of
- 37:31PSMA treatment in addition to
- 37:32hormones and chemotherapy. Remember I
- 37:34told you, in MHSPC
- 37:36combination therapy with two or
- 37:38three drugs is the standard
- 37:39of care. So why not
- 37:40just give them this, two
- 37:42treatments of PSMA in addition?
- 37:44And they looked at, this
- 37:45endpoint, which was after all
- 37:47the treatment's done a a
- 37:48year later, who's more likely
- 37:49to have a low PSA?
- 37:50And it was actually you
- 37:52were four times more likely
- 37:53to have a low PSA
- 37:54a year later.
- 37:55So it suggests actually that
- 37:57giving this treatment upfront will
- 37:59have a long term benefit.
- 38:01Now,
- 38:02there's another study giving six
- 38:03of these cycles six of
- 38:04these treatments.
- 38:05If if you give a
- 38:06treatment like hormonal therapy or
- 38:08chemotherapy,
- 38:09then the target starts to
- 38:10go away. Will giving four
- 38:12more of those cycles of
- 38:14of of LU one seven
- 38:16seven get rid of more
- 38:16cancer? It's not clear. In
- 38:18fact, when we give these
- 38:19treatments to patients who have
- 38:20a negative PET scan, it
- 38:21doesn't work. It only works
- 38:23if the target's there.
- 38:25So I think, what these
- 38:27studies suggest is earlier use
- 38:29of these drugs does matter,
- 38:30but
- 38:31giving it indiscriminately
- 38:32probably doesn't.
- 38:35So this is my summary
- 38:36of radioligand therapy. And by
- 38:37the way, this is a
- 38:38very odd area for drug
- 38:39development. People are very, very
- 38:41interested in replicating this. Because
- 38:43right now, it's just two
- 38:44diseases where RLTs
- 38:46are actually approved. One is
- 38:47prostate cancer like I showed
- 38:48you, and the other is
- 38:49neuroendocrine
- 38:50tumors, okay, which are even
- 38:52less common. But people are
- 38:53very interested in this type
- 38:55of approach in in bladder
- 38:56cancer, breast cancer, and lung
- 38:58cancer. And I think the
- 38:59the ability to deliver this
- 39:01type of radiopharmaceutical
- 39:02treatment, I think, will hinge
- 39:03on how good those targets
- 39:05are. We happen to have
- 39:06a really good target with
- 39:07prostate cancer, which is PSMA.
- 39:09The other interesting thing that
- 39:10you'll hear about is alpha
- 39:12particles.
- 39:13So, you know, I'm not
- 39:14a physicist,
- 39:15but there are better ways
- 39:17of delivering a lethal dose
- 39:19of,
- 39:19of, radiopharmaceutical
- 39:21that are more able to
- 39:23kill these cancer cells with
- 39:24less toxicity.
- 39:26Okay. So the last part
- 39:27of my talk is really
- 39:28about immunotherapy. And, you know,
- 39:30this was it's hard to
- 39:31believe it's this was the
- 39:33breakthrough of the year in
- 39:34two thousand thirteen. So we've
- 39:35been living with this now
- 39:36for almost a dozen years.
- 39:38And, of course, you know,
- 39:39lung cancer is the prototypical,
- 39:41disease,
- 39:43along with melanoma and and
- 39:45kidney cancer where immunotherapies made,
- 39:47important differences.
- 39:49But prostate cancer actually was
- 39:50one of the first diseases
- 39:51where a checkpoint inhibitor was
- 39:53tested. This was CTLA four.
- 39:55And you can actually see
- 39:56that there was a suggestion
- 39:58that some patients might benefit
- 39:59from a checkpoint inhibitor even
- 40:01in prostate cancer, but it
- 40:02was never developed further. This
- 40:03was,
- 40:04predating,
- 40:05the use of PD L
- 40:06one or PD one inhibitors.
- 40:08But there was a suggestion
- 40:09that maybe some patients with
- 40:10prostate cancer actually could benefit
- 40:12from checkpoint inhibitors. But in
- 40:14the end,
- 40:15the only approval for checkpoint
- 40:16inhibitors in prostate cancer right
- 40:18now are in TMB high
- 40:19or MSI high tumors,
- 40:21which, as you know, are
- 40:22highly mutated prostate cancer. Prostate
- 40:24cancers in general are not
- 40:25highly mutated.
- 40:28The prevalence is probably around
- 40:29three to five percent,
- 40:30and the rate of response
- 40:31is about fifty percent, but
- 40:33some of these are durable.
- 40:34You can't really see the
- 40:35the bottom there. But the
- 40:36progression
- 40:37free survival for those with
- 40:39very high TMBs, you can
- 40:40see from from upper to
- 40:42lower, the highest TMBs. You
- 40:44can see that they're, they
- 40:45they are not progressing after
- 40:47two or three years, some
- 40:48of these patients. So, again,
- 40:49it behooves us to check,
- 40:51for for evidence of a
- 40:53tumor mutational burden or MSI
- 40:55high or unstable disease.
- 40:58But I think the real
- 41:00you know, that's a very
- 41:01small percentage of patients. So,
- 41:02you know, I I probably
- 41:03have seen one or two,
- 41:04even though I have a
- 41:05very big practice,
- 41:07is is really taking a
- 41:08a page out of the
- 41:09PSMA handbook and to look
- 41:11at,
- 41:12bispecific t cell engagers,
- 41:14so called BiTE. So remember,
- 41:16if you have a target
- 41:17and now you can deliver
- 41:18a radiopharmaceutical,
- 41:19maybe you can deliver other
- 41:20things like T cells. We
- 41:22know that T cells are
- 41:23the things that kill cancer.
- 41:24Right? Why don't they work
- 41:26in can prostate cancer in
- 41:27general like in these,
- 41:29in this curve? Well, probably
- 41:30because they don't know where
- 41:31to go. So if you
- 41:32can be smart and deliver
- 41:33the T cell directly to
- 41:34the cancer cell, maybe you'll
- 41:36have a better,
- 41:37out outcome.
- 41:39So this was one of
- 41:40the first bites that certainly
- 41:41got a lot of attention.
- 41:42This was now five years
- 41:43ago.
- 41:44And you can see that
- 41:45a majority
- 41:46of patients receiving AMG one
- 41:48sixty, which was a PSMA
- 41:49directed,
- 41:50bispecific t t cell engager,
- 41:52actually had a PSA response
- 41:54in this waterfall plot. It
- 41:55had some toxicities that really
- 41:57killed this drug,
- 41:58but there was this, you
- 41:59know, there are a bunch
- 42:00of other ones that I
- 42:01showed you on that first
- 42:02slide. And this was, this
- 42:04is also something that is
- 42:05quite, I think, exciting and
- 42:07interesting, but I think it
- 42:08reminds us of the toxicity.
- 42:10You know, it's interesting. We'll
- 42:11see the same drug used
- 42:12in breast cancer and lung
- 42:14cancer and prostate cancer, and
- 42:15sometimes we'll see more toxicity
- 42:16in prostate cancer patients. I
- 42:18don't always understand why. I
- 42:20have a theory about it,
- 42:21which relates to androgen deprivation,
- 42:23but we do see more
- 42:24toxicity in prostate cancer patients
- 42:26than we might sometimes expect
- 42:27with the same drug.
- 42:29But this is a combination
- 42:30of a a a bispecific
- 42:31from Regeneron
- 42:33that, again, shows
- 42:35significant
- 42:36responses, especially when combined with
- 42:37the checkpoint inhibitor. But it
- 42:38was toxic, and there were
- 42:40several deaths. So what they've
- 42:41done is they've taken away
- 42:42the checkpoint inhibitor, and they're
- 42:43just using the bispecific alone.
- 42:46And this got a lot
- 42:48of attention last year,
- 42:49a couple years ago now,
- 42:51a STEEP one bispecific.
- 42:53STEEP one is another target,
- 42:55immune target that,
- 42:57showed almost a sixty percent
- 42:59response rate. Again, in highly
- 43:00pretreated patients, and you can
- 43:01see the majority of patients
- 43:03responded.
- 43:04So I think this concept
- 43:06has,
- 43:07has, legs. I think we
- 43:08really know that we can
- 43:10deliver a t cell to
- 43:11the site of cancer as
- 43:12long as we can control
- 43:13the toxicity.
- 43:15And the last point I
- 43:16would make is really around,
- 43:18what we know to be
- 43:19a
- 43:20a pathway of progression for
- 43:21prostate cancer, and that's neuroendocrine
- 43:23differentiation.
- 43:24This is a,
- 43:25a cartoon that talks about
- 43:27kind of the progression from
- 43:28the left to the right
- 43:29of a normal prostate gland
- 43:31to typical adenocarcinoma.
- 43:32Those are the PSA producing
- 43:34prostate cancer cells that might
- 43:35spread to the bone, and
- 43:37it moves into this so
- 43:38called neuroendocrine,
- 43:40phenotype. Neuroendocrine tumor cells are
- 43:43don't make PSA. They are
- 43:45not as responsive to androgen.
- 43:46And what you see by
- 43:47the time they develop pure
- 43:48neuroendocrine prostate cancer is that
- 43:50these cancers may have unusual
- 43:52patterns to spread. They may
- 43:53go to the brain, which
- 43:54almost never happens normally in
- 43:55prostate cancer, and they're highly
- 43:57aggressive. They may go to
- 43:58the liver, for example.
- 44:00And this has been, unfortunately,
- 44:02a way in which our
- 44:03ARPs and the other androgen
- 44:04pathway drugs that we have
- 44:06stop working, and these patients
- 44:08may progress and chemotherapy, unfortunately,
- 44:10has a very, modest effect.
- 44:12Now this is something that
- 44:13has broad implications across lots
- 44:15of diseases because we know
- 44:16actually that neuroendocrine carcinoma is,
- 44:19present all over the body.
- 44:20These neuroendocrine cells are present
- 44:22all over the body. And
- 44:23in fact, you know, probably
- 44:24the neuroendocrine type of cancer
- 44:26that we know the most
- 44:26about is in the lung.
- 44:28And so a lot of
- 44:28the things we've done for
- 44:29neuroendocrine pros can prostate cancer
- 44:31has come from our understanding
- 44:32of how lung cancer doctors
- 44:34treat neuroendocrine,
- 44:35cancer or small cell cancers.
- 44:38But there is a target
- 44:38here too called DLL three
- 44:40or delta like ligand, three.
- 44:42And you can see here
- 44:43that if you look at,
- 44:44staining for DLL three,
- 44:46which is in the last
- 44:47panel,
- 44:48you can see that, about
- 44:49seventy six percent of, advanced
- 44:51prostate cancers, neuroendocrine prostate cancers
- 44:54express d DLL three, and
- 44:56they don't express the AR.
- 44:57They lose AR expression. They
- 44:58express DLL three. So last
- 45:00year, there was a new
- 45:01BiTE that was approved for
- 45:03small cell lung cancer called
- 45:05tarlatanib
- 45:06or tarlatanib.
- 45:08And,
- 45:09this is a you can
- 45:10see they are targeted towards,
- 45:12delivering a t cell directly
- 45:13to a,
- 45:15small cell lung cancer that
- 45:16might express DLL three. So
- 45:18this has actually been looked
- 45:19at in prostate cancer. And,
- 45:20again, you can see that
- 45:22in patients who have DLL
- 45:23three positive neuroendocrine prostate cancer
- 45:25that there are some long
- 45:26term responders.
- 45:27Overall, the response rate was
- 45:28only ten percent, but I
- 45:29think this again gets to
- 45:30the idea that we have
- 45:31to find and target the
- 45:33right patients.
- 45:35So these are my last
- 45:36couple of slides.
- 45:38Targeted therapy for prostate cancer,
- 45:40I think we're seeing it.
- 45:41AR is the first target,
- 45:42but we have PARP inhibitors
- 45:44for DDR mutations.
- 45:45MSI high tumors should get,
- 45:47checkpoint inhibitors. But we're seeing
- 45:49these PSMA directed therapies, certainly
- 45:51radioligand
- 45:52therapies, but also,
- 45:54these BiTEs.
- 45:55And DLL three is a
- 45:56promising target for neuroendocrine prostate
- 45:58cancer.
- 45:59So I'm gonna end on
- 46:01the concept that I I
- 46:02came here for
- 46:03to Yale, which is how
- 46:05are we gonna use precision
- 46:06medicine more accurately? Here's one
- 46:07disease, a big disease,
- 46:09that is still lethal for
- 46:10a subset of patients. How
- 46:12do we take what we
- 46:13learn about the patient? And
- 46:14you can see, this is
- 46:15from an AACR report. But,
- 46:17basically,
- 46:18think about the world we
- 46:19live in. We're not just
- 46:20these are not men who
- 46:22just come in with one
- 46:23disease. They come in with
- 46:24a background of genetics and
- 46:26and lifestyle factors and and
- 46:28the epigenome and how they
- 46:30present. And there's so many
- 46:31factors that we don't account
- 46:33for when we try to
- 46:34deliver
- 46:35the right treatment to each
- 46:36of these patients. And I'm
- 46:37not saying that we can
- 46:39account for all this, but,
- 46:40you know, we can definitely
- 46:41put people into categories
- 46:43that better account for some
- 46:44of these factors that right
- 46:45now we're not measuring at
- 46:46all.
- 46:48And I think that AI
- 46:49is an area where we're
- 46:50gonna learn more about how
- 46:51to bring this information together.
- 46:53This is what I was
- 46:53trying to do at Sema4
- 46:55when I was there and
- 46:56what I think we can
- 46:57do here with with, the
- 46:58multidisciplinary
- 46:59excellence we have in pathology,
- 47:01molecular,
- 47:02genetics,
- 47:03with, bioinformatics,
- 47:05etcetera. So,
- 47:06you know, this paper came
- 47:08out a few years ago
- 47:09where multimodal AI, which is
- 47:11really using a combination of
- 47:13histology
- 47:14plus clinical data from they
- 47:16used, multiple randomized clinical trials.
- 47:18They created an AI score
- 47:21and, basically predicted the outcomes
- 47:23of of patients. And they
- 47:24actually reclassified,
- 47:26forty two percent of patients
- 47:28compared to clinical risk factors
- 47:30was was so called NCCN
- 47:31criteria.
- 47:33In other words, they were
- 47:35much more accurate for about
- 47:36forty percent of the patients.
- 47:37So we're making decisions based
- 47:38on clinical factors that I
- 47:40mentioned earlier, like PSA and
- 47:41staging.
- 47:43And this
- 47:44AI program
- 47:45was so potent in predicting
- 47:46this and is now commercially
- 47:48available that it made it
- 47:49into the NCCN guidelines this
- 47:50year,
- 47:52as a both a prognostic
- 47:54tool, which, you know, has
- 47:55limited value, but also as
- 47:57a predictor of who should
- 47:58get hormonal therapy with radiation.
- 48:00So I'm just using this
- 48:01as an example of where
- 48:03we're gonna go in the
- 48:04future as we as large
- 48:06language models and and information
- 48:08gets distilled into, bite sized
- 48:10pieces that we as clinicians
- 48:12can use, and I'm really
- 48:13excited to to be part
- 48:14of that. So I'll stop
- 48:15there. Thank you very much
- 48:16for your attention.
- 48:21Thank you. I have time
- 48:22for questions,
- 48:24comments.
- 48:26The floor is open. I'll
- 48:27walk the microphone. Doctor Joseph
- 48:29Kim, and then you can
- 48:30keep the microphone and help
- 48:31me. Okay. Thank you. Thank
- 48:33you, William. This is a
- 48:34fantastic talk. And, again, welcome
- 48:36back, to Yale. So my
- 48:38question I just wanna kinda
- 48:39probe on the your last
- 48:40point about the precision medicine
- 48:42in prostate cancer. Again, in
- 48:43prostate cancer, that may not
- 48:44be the most precise term
- 48:46either because we are still
- 48:47learning how we define precision
- 48:48oncology in prostate cancer. So,
- 48:50you know, now as you
- 48:51mentioned, we have a lot
- 48:52of good treatment options available
- 48:53for metastatic prostate cancer. You
- 48:54mentioned novel AR integrator, RIP,
- 48:57chemotherapy,
- 48:58PSM target therapies, and PARP
- 49:00inhibitors.
- 49:01And doctor Roy Herbst, you
- 49:02know, he when it was
- 49:03a SWA, he's a SWA,
- 49:05he designed this master protocol,
- 49:07the master protocol, big umbrella
- 49:09protocol. Are we as a
- 49:10field in prostate cancer, are
- 49:11we ready for things like
- 49:13that? Because if you really
- 49:14make an impact in in
- 49:15clinical practice, practice, we have
- 49:16to come up with a
- 49:17good novel trial design.
- 49:19I'd like to know what
- 49:20your views on, on these
- 49:21issues are.
- 49:22Yeah. I mean, I think,
- 49:24I would love to hear
- 49:24Roy's thoughts too.
- 49:27When we built this this
- 49:29graphic, right,
- 49:30that you can see,
- 49:32we did it piece by
- 49:33piece. It was certainly it
- 49:35was painful, and it was
- 49:36each clinical trial.
- 49:37And the biggest problem with
- 49:39this picture is we don't
- 49:40know what we should do
- 49:41when in which order. Right?
- 49:43This is we have all
- 49:44these debates about, sequencing of
- 49:45treatments.
- 49:47What you're suggesting is that
- 49:48we move into this kind
- 49:49of bigger thinking. Right? The
- 49:51this idea of a an,
- 49:53an umbrella protocol or a
- 49:54protocol that's a master protocol
- 49:56that that, accounts for all
- 49:58of the different heterogeneity.
- 50:00The the the the real
- 50:01reason we haven't done it,
- 50:02as you know, Joseph, is
- 50:03that we don't have the
- 50:04categories for these patients. Right?
- 50:07Most patients express
- 50:08AR. Most patients express PSMA.
- 50:12We don't know who responds
- 50:13to, to,
- 50:15chemotherapy. We don't know who
- 50:16responds to,
- 50:18to,
- 50:19some of the treatments that
- 50:21we give. So that is
- 50:22the reason we don't have
- 50:23this. The other thing that
- 50:24maybe similar or different is
- 50:26that these tumors evolve over
- 50:28time. Right?
- 50:30So, this picture shows that,
- 50:31in fact, we induce some
- 50:33of these resistance patterns. That's
- 50:34not different from lung cancer.
- 50:36But maybe lung cancer
- 50:37presents with enough categories that
- 50:39you can do a master
- 50:40protocol where you give the
- 50:42right drug to the right
- 50:43person right up front. So
- 50:44I would love to hear
- 50:45if if that's what's made
- 50:47them kind of this broader
- 50:48approach successful in lung cancer,
- 50:49Roy.
- 50:50Well, of course,
- 50:52lung cancer's evolved now with
- 50:54nine different, you know, genetic,
- 50:57defects, you know, oncogenes that
- 51:00we can target that are
- 51:01addicted,
- 51:02that are addictive. So that
- 51:03that opens up the door
- 51:04there. I think the area
- 51:05where these master protocols could
- 51:07come in handy is in
- 51:08resistance, either primary or acquired.
- 51:10But you're right. You need
- 51:10to have a dichotomy. You
- 51:11can't solve the whole problem
- 51:13at once.
- 51:14You would need to find
- 51:15patients who are resistant to
- 51:16one therapy. And and then,
- 51:17of course, there probably are
- 51:18patients who are probably better
- 51:19off with one drug than
- 51:20the other, and that that
- 51:21is precision medicine. And, we
- 51:22certainly have the ability to
- 51:23do that here. Right? One
- 51:25of the things you'll work
- 51:25on, William, because we have
- 51:26the pathology is is amazing.
- 51:28We have the surgical
- 51:30colleagues who will co work
- 51:31with us, radiation oncology. And
- 51:32then in a multimodality way,
- 51:34sort of pull that all
- 51:35together. So I think that's
- 51:36a good point, Joe. I
- 51:37wanna ask you another question,
- 51:38William,
- 51:39and, other questions, Joe, who
- 51:41has the other microphone. You're
- 51:42at Greenwich, and you're setting
- 51:43up a service line there.
- 51:45The PMSA,
- 51:47therapy you mentioned, is that
- 51:48available there?
- 51:49Is it available throughout our
- 51:50network? And, then also the
- 51:52BiTE therapy. I just came
- 51:53off a couple weeks on
- 51:54service, and I can tell
- 51:55you that that's not the
- 51:56easiest thing. Are we administering
- 51:57that at all our centers
- 51:58as well? Yeah. Well, the
- 52:00imaging is available there in
- 52:01Greenwich, and I'm meeting with
- 52:04the nuclear medicine team tomorrow,
- 52:06I believe, to talk about
- 52:08how to make,
- 52:09some of these treatments available,
- 52:10in places like Greenwich. But
- 52:12it is complicated. I think
- 52:13you need the right expertise
- 52:15in each site to be
- 52:16able to deliver it safely
- 52:17and effectively.
- 52:18And I have no doubt
- 52:20that over time, we'll build
- 52:21that. I mean, one of
- 52:22the reasons, as you know,
- 52:23that I came to Greenwich
- 52:24is that I I saw
- 52:26its proximity to New York
- 52:28and our ability to kind
- 52:29of apply the great science
- 52:30and the great clinical care
- 52:32we deliver across the whole
- 52:33Milo network, but in a
- 52:34place where there's a high
- 52:36concentration of people, which is
- 52:37in the New York area.
- 52:38I was in Manhattan for
- 52:39a long time. People would
- 52:40when I moved to Manhattan,
- 52:41people were like, why does
- 52:42Manhattan need another cancer center?
- 52:44And it turned out Manhattan
- 52:45needed another cancer center quite
- 52:47significantly. There were patients who
- 52:48were really not cared for
- 52:49by some of the well
- 52:50known institutions in New York
- 52:52City because they didn't have
- 52:53access, because, there's, it was
- 52:56such a highly concentrated area.
- 52:58So I think Greenwich represents
- 53:00a real opportunity for us
- 53:01to to to do research,
- 53:03to do clinical care that's
- 53:04at the highest level,
- 53:06but we'll start with the
- 53:07areas of treatment that we
- 53:09know are safe and effective.
- 53:10And and in the long
- 53:11run, I think we want
- 53:12patients in Greenwich or in
- 53:14Westerly or anywhere within the
- 53:15Smilo network to get the
- 53:17best standards of care. Great.
- 53:19Any other questions?
- 53:20Do we have any of
- 53:21our fellows here?
- 53:23I didn't think so. I'm
- 53:25gonna sign an executive order
- 53:26to get the fellows.
- 53:27And and and, seriously, we
- 53:29should have our fellows here.
- 53:30This was a wonderful talk,
- 53:31and,
- 53:32if anyone's listening online,
- 53:33we're gonna we're gonna exchange
- 53:35that. But but, William, let
- 53:35me ask you. The precision
- 53:36medicine tumor board, which we
- 53:38started a while back and
- 53:39then COVID sort of derailed.
- 53:41But I would think that's
- 53:42critical for a cancer center
- 53:43that we get our scientists
- 53:45and we get the people
- 53:45that know how to analyze
- 53:47the DNA and the epigenetics
- 53:48and and pull that all
- 53:49together.
- 53:50You're gonna revitalize that, I
- 53:52know. Can you tell us
- 53:52your plans? Well, I think,
- 53:54first of all, Zenta and
- 53:55Rick Wilson Zenta Walter and
- 53:56Rick Wilson have done a
- 53:58really great job of taking
- 53:59this over from Qualator. But
- 54:00I do think that,
- 54:02the goal is to kind
- 54:03of
- 54:04not just teach, but really
- 54:06affect the care of all
- 54:07the patients who get this
- 54:08molecular testing across all the
- 54:10diseases that we see. We
- 54:12have an amazing phase one
- 54:13program. And in a way,
- 54:14a precision medicine tumor board
- 54:16is like matchmaking.
- 54:17It's like finding the genetic
- 54:19results that would lead patients
- 54:20to go on trials sooner
- 54:22and faster. We know the
- 54:23biggest barrier. I showed that
- 54:25biomarker slide from the FDA.
- 54:27The biggest barrier that that
- 54:28industry has with these drugs
- 54:30is finding patients to go
- 54:31on their trials. And cancer
- 54:33is no longer prostate cancer,
- 54:34lung cancer, breast cancer. It
- 54:36is,
- 54:37increasingly rare diseases because they're
- 54:39subsetted into these molecular subtypes.
- 54:41So I think a precision
- 54:43medicine tumor board is really
- 54:44critical, and, my goal is
- 54:45to think about ways that
- 54:47we can improve it, make
- 54:48it hybrid,
- 54:49and think about more frequent
- 54:50and and really tactical
- 54:52discussion so that both trainees
- 54:54and and the docs themselves
- 54:55really learn from the experience,
- 54:57including myself. Great. Speaking of
- 54:58multiple data, we have a
- 54:59chair of urology, doctor Kim.
- 55:01Well, again, thank you so
- 55:02much for the talk. I
- 55:03just wanna go back to
- 55:04the, the disparity issue with
- 55:06the black man. So, again,
- 55:07I think we as a
- 55:08field have been talking about
- 55:09this for a long, long
- 55:10time.
- 55:11So the suggestions in the
- 55:12I read the your papers.
- 55:13How do you implement something
- 55:14like that? What are your
- 55:15thoughts on getting it out
- 55:16into the community to make
- 55:17sure that such guidelines are
- 55:19followed? Because there's still some
- 55:20huge resistance,
- 55:22in terms of implementing. So
- 55:23what challenge do you see
- 55:24and, your thoughts? I I
- 55:26yeah. It's a great question,
- 55:27Isaac, because,
- 55:29sometimes the people who are
- 55:30the biggest evangelists for finding
- 55:31these cancers earlier, like urologists
- 55:33or oncologists, are not the
- 55:34ones talking to the patients
- 55:36in primary care. I think
- 55:38that there's a way to
- 55:39implement a smile wide, Yale
- 55:41wide,
- 55:42program. This is really not
- 55:43a cancer issue. It's precancerous.
- 55:44It's really internal medicine where
- 55:46we
- 55:47try to convey this idea
- 55:48and and to create, maybe
- 55:50a Yale wide program
- 55:52for looking at these high
- 55:53risk populations. That includes black
- 55:54men. It includes
- 55:55men with, genetic risk.
- 55:58And I think this publication
- 55:59of this guideline, the reason
- 56:00I think NEJM,
- 56:01evidence allowed us to publish
- 56:03it was they recognize
- 56:05this gap between
- 56:06this idea that the USPSTF
- 56:08says there's not enough evidence,
- 56:10and now we have something
- 56:12that can justify a program
- 56:13where we're more aggressive about
- 56:14screening black men. So I
- 56:16wanna certainly sit down with
- 56:17you and your department, but
- 56:19also internal medicine, primary care,
- 56:22and, you know, AAFP and,
- 56:24you know, ACP,
- 56:25the American College of Physicians,
- 56:27they're kind of still against
- 56:28screening.
- 56:29And this is the problem.
- 56:30Risk adapted screening is the
- 56:32key. Don't screen everyone. Don't
- 56:33screen the ninety year old
- 56:35guy who comes in a
- 56:35wheelchair. But a fifty year
- 56:37old or forty five year
- 56:38old black man who has
- 56:40a family history, he's getting
- 56:41the wrong message. I know
- 56:43that because they're they're not
- 56:44being told that they should
- 56:46be detected trying to detect
- 56:47this cancer. So I think
- 56:48it is a huge challenge.
- 56:49I think ACS is very
- 56:51interested in creating the the
- 56:53the the toolkit to be
- 56:54able to help places do
- 56:55this, and that's, I think,
- 56:56another source
- 56:57of information.
- 56:59Any other questions? I think
- 57:00we are at the end
- 57:01of the hour. I'll just
- 57:02say that this is a
- 57:03wonderful example of what,
- 57:04comprehensive cancer center does. You
- 57:06know, we go from the
- 57:07patient,
- 57:08access, you know, bringing people
- 57:10in and getting them screened,
- 57:11taking them all the way
- 57:12through the new therapeutic
- 57:14options.
- 57:15We have wonderful surgery, radiation,
- 57:17a a large number of
- 57:18medical oncologists, Dan, yourself, Joe
- 57:20Kim is here,
- 57:22many others. We have Sameer
- 57:23Azadi coming from,
- 57:25New York who works on
- 57:26plasticity, right, who works on
- 57:27the developmental. So we have
- 57:29so much that we can
- 57:29do here. So, let you
- 57:31know, you should start thinking
- 57:32about, like, a spore in
- 57:33a few years. So,
- 57:34really great to see everyone
- 57:35here. William will stay up
- 57:37for a few more questions,
- 57:38and,
- 57:38enjoy the rest of your
- 57:39day. Thank you.