RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT07302763

Four-Timepoint Multi-tracer PET Imaging to Characterize Metastatic prOstate Cancer Heterogeneity


Sponsor

Frederic Pouliot

Enrollment

45 participants

Start Date

Nov 4, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Imaging modalities currently used in the clinics do not image cancer, but the effect ofncancer on bone (bone scan) or on the anatomy (CT-scan). Bone scan and CT-scan are therefore named conventional imaging (CI) modalities. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is an imaging technique that uses tracers to measure cancer activity in each lesion and is therefore quantitative. Usually, treatment changes in metastatic prostate cancers are based on the appearance of new lesions on CI, named metastases. Prostate cancer metastases have been shown to be clonal, which means that there are several cancers within each patient, potentially with divergent behaviors under therapy. In other words, some metastases might be resistant to a systemic therapy like chemotherapy, while others might be sensitive. The study proposes here to use molecular imaging by positron emission tomography to image and quantify the activity of prostate cancer cells in each metastasis before start, after 3 months and after progression during systemic therapy. Each metastasis will then be measured to assess whether there is an increase (resistance) or a decrease (response) in prostate cancer cell activity. The analysis will determine how many metastases progress or remain stable when new metastases appear on conventional imaging (polyclonal resistance), as well as the impact of a change in therapy on metastases that were previously stable when cancer progressed elsewhere. In addition, the genes expressed in responding and non-responding metastases will be analyzed to identify gene expression patterns associated with resistance and/or response. Overall, this study aims to characterize metastatic prostate cancer clonal resistance mechanisms using serial PET molecular imaging and imaging-guided genomics.


Eligibility

Sex: MALEMin Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is using advanced PET imaging with multiple tracers (radioactive dyes that highlight different cancer characteristics) to better understand how metastatic prostate cancer varies from one part of the body to another in the same patient. This concept — called tumor heterogeneity — is important for choosing the most effective treatment. **You may be eligible if...** - You were assigned male at birth and are 18 or older - You have prostate cancer that has been confirmed by biopsy - Your cancer has spread (at least 3 active metastatic spots on scans) - Your cancer has progressed despite hormone therapy (castration-resistant prostate cancer) and after treatment with a specific type of hormonal drug (AR pathway inhibitor) **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your prostate cancer has not yet become resistant to hormone therapy - You have not yet received standard treatments - You have serious heart, kidney, or other organ problems that would make the imaging unsafe Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTPET Tracer

Multi-tracer PET imaging to characterize metastatic prOstate Cancer heterogeneity


Locations(1)

CHU de Québec-Université Laval

Québec, Quebec, Canada

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NCT07302763


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