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Advanced Bladder Cancer

Beyond Androgen Blockade - Exploring New Pathways for Treating mCRPC and mHSPC

APCCC 2024

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EMBARK

Recent Physician-Scientist Review Articles

  State of the Evidence Review Articles
mHSPC
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PSMA-Targeted Therapy
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Transformative Evidence

  Curated by Clinicians: Educational Forum with Videos, Abstracts and Conference Information

EMBARK Trial

Serum tumor markers can be a blessing and a curse. After definitive local therapy for prostate cancer, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is quite sensitive and specific, and can detect micrometastatic disease well before any radiographic or symptomatic evidence of disease. When biochemical recurrence (BCR) occurs, early detection can guide curative-intent salvage therapies such as salvage radiation.

ARASENS Trial

In the ARASENS trial (NCT02799602), darolutamide in combination with androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) and docetaxel significantly reduced the risk of death by 32.5% (HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.57-0.80; P < .0001) compared with placebo plus ADT with docetaxel in patients with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC). We present efficacy and safety of darolutamide versus placebo in Black patients from ARASENS.

Trials in Progress

  Curated by Clinicians: Educational Forum with Videos, Abstracts and Conference Information

CLARIFY Trial

  • Nucleus RadioPharma will manufacture the 67Cu-SAR-bisPSMA drug product at their new state-of-the-art facility in Rochester, MN.
  • The Master Services Agreement (MSA) and Clinical Supply Agreement with Nucleus RadioPharma complement the existing agreement with NorthStar Medical Radioisotopes, LLC (NorthStar) for 67Cu-SAR-bisPSMA production to expand drug manufacturing in anticipation of recruitment demand for Phase II and III trials of this product.

Pivot-006 Trial

– First Patient Dosed in Expanded Access Program and Enrollment Ongoing –

Reno, Nevada (UroToday.com) -- CG Oncology, Inc. (NASDAQ: CGON), a late-stage clinical biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing a potential backbone bladder-sparing therapeutic for patients with bladder cancer, announced that it has initiated an Expanded Access Program (EAP) for cretostimogene grenadenorepvec in the U.S. for patients with Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (NMIBC) who are unresponsive to Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) and meet certain program eligibility criteria. The first patient has been dosed in the EAP and enrollment in the study is ongoing.