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Psma Intensity Can be Altered by Androgen and Phospho-SrC Obstruction
Sponsor: St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney
Summary
The study's purpose is to understand the appearance of your prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET scan after you take 14 days of treatment with a drug called dasatinib alone or in combination with anti-testosterone drug call darolutamide. Who is it for? You may be eligible to join this study if you have metastatic prostate cancer and had a recent PSMA scan showing low PSMA uptake Study Details: Participants will receive dasatinib 100 mg daily or dasatinib 100 mg daily and darolutamide 600 mg twice daily for 14 days. They will undergo another PSMA PET scan after 14 days. Participants will be followed up on day 7 of treatment and 30 days after treatment. It is hoped that this research will provide insight into the mechanism of PSMA expression in advanced prostate cancer.
Official title: PICAASO / CA180-722: Psma Intensity Can be Altered by Androgen and Phospho-SrC Obstruction
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
22
Start Date
2021-10-18
Completion Date
2025-12-01
Last Updated
2025-05-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Dasatinib
Dasatinib 100mg once daily orally for 14 Days
Darolutamide
Darolumatide 600 mg twice daily orally for 14 Days
Locations (2)
Kinghorn Cancer Centre, St. Vincent's Hospital
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia