Posted 3/15/2023 1:45 PM (GMT 0)
A team at Duke University Medical School has announced that they have identified a protein that is present on the surface of castrate resistant PCa cells. These resistant cells are neuroendocrine and their identifying protein is termed glypican-3. This is very preliminary, as both delivery methods and kill agents will need a long period to develop and test. Yet it does, hopefully, offer a new approach to get at the core problem of castrate resistance. Readers can find an article about this work by searching “Duke University Closing in on New Treatments for Prostate Cancer.”