The Role of Lineage Plasticity in Prostate Cancer Therapy Resistance

Himisha Beltran(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Andrew M. Hruszkewycz(National Cancer Institute), Howard I. Scher(Kettering University), Jeffrey Hildesheim(National Cancer Institute), Jennifer S. Isaacs(National Cancer Institute), Evan Y. Yu(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Kathleen Kelly(National Cancer Institute), Daniel W. Lin(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Adam P. Dicker(Thomas Jefferson University), Julia T. Arnold(National Cancer Institute), Toby T. Hecht(National Cancer Institute), Max S. Wicha(University of Michigan), Rosalie C. Sears(Oregon Health & Science University), David R. Rowley(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard M. White(Kettering University), James L. Gulley(National Cancer Institute), John K. Lee(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Maria Diaz Meco(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Eric J. Small(University of California, San Francisco), Michael M. Shen(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Karen E. Knudsen(Thomas Jefferson University), David W. Goodrich(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Tamara L. Lotan(Johns Hopkins University), Amina Zoubeidi(University of British Columbia), Charles L. Sawyers(Kettering University), Charles M. Rudin(Kettering University), Massimo Loda(Cornell University), Timothy C. Thompson(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Mark A. Rubin(University of Bern), Abdul Tawab-Amiri(National Cancer Institute), William L. Dahut(National Cancer Institute), Peter S. Nelson(Fred Hutch Cancer Center)
Clinical Cancer Research
July 30, 2019
Cited by 390Open Access
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Abstract

Lineage plasticity has emerged as an important mechanism of treatment resistance in prostate cancer. Treatment-refractory prostate cancers are increasingly associated with loss of luminal prostate markers, and in many cases induction of developmental programs, stem cell-like phenotypes, and neuroendocrine/neuronal features. Clinically, lineage plasticity may manifest as low PSA progression, resistance to androgen receptor (AR) pathway inhibitors, and sometimes small cell/neuroendocrine pathologic features observed on metastatic biopsy. This mechanism is not restricted to prostate cancer as other malignancies also demonstrate lineage plasticity during resistance to targeted therapies. At present, there is no established therapeutic approach for patients with advanced prostate cancer developing lineage plasticity or small cell neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC) due to knowledge gaps in the underlying biology. Few clinical trials address questions in this space, and the outlook for patients remains poor. To move forward, urgently needed are: (i) a fundamental understanding of how lineage plasticity occurs and how it can best be defined; (ii) the temporal contribution and cooperation of emerging drivers; (iii) preclinical models that recapitulate biology of the disease and the recognized phenotypes; (iv) identification of therapeutic targets; and (v) novel trial designs dedicated to the entity as it is defined. This Perspective represents a consensus arising from the NCI Workshop on Lineage Plasticity and Androgen Receptor-Independent Prostate Cancer. We focus on the critical questions underlying lineage plasticity and AR-independent prostate cancer, outline knowledge and resource gaps, and identify strategies to facilitate future collaborative clinical translational and basic studies in this space.


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