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Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions

In the early twenty-first century, societies around the world are facing the paradoxal epidemic development of PCa as a non-communicable disease. PCa is the most frequently diagnosed cancer for men in several countries such as the USA. Permanently improving diagnostics and treatments in the PCa mana...

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Autores principales: Kucera, Radek, Pecen, Ladislav, Topolcan, Ondrej, Dahal, Anshu Raj, Costigliola, Vincenzo, Giordano, Frank A., Golubnitschaja, Olga
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7429585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32843909
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13167-020-00214-1
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author Kucera, Radek
Pecen, Ladislav
Topolcan, Ondrej
Dahal, Anshu Raj
Costigliola, Vincenzo
Giordano, Frank A.
Golubnitschaja, Olga
author_facet Kucera, Radek
Pecen, Ladislav
Topolcan, Ondrej
Dahal, Anshu Raj
Costigliola, Vincenzo
Giordano, Frank A.
Golubnitschaja, Olga
author_sort Kucera, Radek
collection PubMed
description In the early twenty-first century, societies around the world are facing the paradoxal epidemic development of PCa as a non-communicable disease. PCa is the most frequently diagnosed cancer for men in several countries such as the USA. Permanently improving diagnostics and treatments in the PCa management causes an impressive divergence between, on one hand, permanently increasing numbers of diagnosed PCa cases and, on the other hand, stable or even slightly decreasing mortality rates. Still, aspects listed below are waiting for innovate solutions in the context of predictive approaches, targeted prevention and personalisation of medical care (PPPM / 3PM). A. PCa belongs to the cancer types with the highest incidence worldwide. Corresponding economic burden is enormous. Moreover, the costs of treating PCa are currently increasing more quickly than those of any other cancer. Implementing individualised patient profiles and adapted treatment algorithms would make currently too heterogeneous landscape of PCa treatment costs more transparent providing clear “road map” for the cost saving. B. PCa is a systemic multi-factorial disease. Consequently, predictive diagnostics by liquid biopsy analysis is instrumental for the disease prediction, targeted prevention and curative treatments at early stages. C. The incidence of metastasising PCa is rapidly increasing particularly in younger populations. Exemplified by trends observed in the USA, prognosis is that the annual burden will increase by over 40% in 2025. To this end, one of the evident deficits is the reactive character of medical services currently provided to populations. Innovative screening programmes might be useful to identify persons in suboptimal health conditions before the clinical onset of metastasising PCa. Strong predisposition to systemic hypoxic conditions and ischemic lesions (e.g. characteristic for individuals with Flammer syndrome phenotype) and low-grade inflammation might be indicative for specific phenotyping and genotyping in metastasising PCa screening and disease management. Predictive liquid biopsy tests for CTC enumeration and their molecular characterisation are considered to be useful for secondary prevention of metastatic disease in PCa patients. D. Particular rapidly increasing PCa incidence rates are characteristic for adolescents and young adults aged 15–40 years. Patients with early onset prostate cancer pose unique challenges; multi-factorial risks for these trends are proposed. Consequently, multi-level diagnostics including phenotyping and multi-omics are considered to be the most appropriate tool for the risk assessment, prediction and prognosis. Accumulating evidence suggests that early onset prostate cancer is a distinct phenotype from both aetiological and clinical perspectives deserving particular attention from view point of 3P medical approaches.
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spelling pubmed-74295852020-08-24 Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions Kucera, Radek Pecen, Ladislav Topolcan, Ondrej Dahal, Anshu Raj Costigliola, Vincenzo Giordano, Frank A. Golubnitschaja, Olga EPMA J Review In the early twenty-first century, societies around the world are facing the paradoxal epidemic development of PCa as a non-communicable disease. PCa is the most frequently diagnosed cancer for men in several countries such as the USA. Permanently improving diagnostics and treatments in the PCa management causes an impressive divergence between, on one hand, permanently increasing numbers of diagnosed PCa cases and, on the other hand, stable or even slightly decreasing mortality rates. Still, aspects listed below are waiting for innovate solutions in the context of predictive approaches, targeted prevention and personalisation of medical care (PPPM / 3PM). A. PCa belongs to the cancer types with the highest incidence worldwide. Corresponding economic burden is enormous. Moreover, the costs of treating PCa are currently increasing more quickly than those of any other cancer. Implementing individualised patient profiles and adapted treatment algorithms would make currently too heterogeneous landscape of PCa treatment costs more transparent providing clear “road map” for the cost saving. B. PCa is a systemic multi-factorial disease. Consequently, predictive diagnostics by liquid biopsy analysis is instrumental for the disease prediction, targeted prevention and curative treatments at early stages. C. The incidence of metastasising PCa is rapidly increasing particularly in younger populations. Exemplified by trends observed in the USA, prognosis is that the annual burden will increase by over 40% in 2025. To this end, one of the evident deficits is the reactive character of medical services currently provided to populations. Innovative screening programmes might be useful to identify persons in suboptimal health conditions before the clinical onset of metastasising PCa. Strong predisposition to systemic hypoxic conditions and ischemic lesions (e.g. characteristic for individuals with Flammer syndrome phenotype) and low-grade inflammation might be indicative for specific phenotyping and genotyping in metastasising PCa screening and disease management. Predictive liquid biopsy tests for CTC enumeration and their molecular characterisation are considered to be useful for secondary prevention of metastatic disease in PCa patients. D. Particular rapidly increasing PCa incidence rates are characteristic for adolescents and young adults aged 15–40 years. Patients with early onset prostate cancer pose unique challenges; multi-factorial risks for these trends are proposed. Consequently, multi-level diagnostics including phenotyping and multi-omics are considered to be the most appropriate tool for the risk assessment, prediction and prognosis. Accumulating evidence suggests that early onset prostate cancer is a distinct phenotype from both aetiological and clinical perspectives deserving particular attention from view point of 3P medical approaches. Springer International Publishing 2020-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7429585/ /pubmed/32843909 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13167-020-00214-1 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Review
Kucera, Radek
Pecen, Ladislav
Topolcan, Ondrej
Dahal, Anshu Raj
Costigliola, Vincenzo
Giordano, Frank A.
Golubnitschaja, Olga
Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title_full Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title_fullStr Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title_full_unstemmed Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title_short Prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3PM dimensional solutions
title_sort prostate cancer management: long-term beliefs, epidemic developments in the early twenty-first century and 3pm dimensional solutions
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7429585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32843909
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13167-020-00214-1
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