Patent application number | Description | Published |
20090238755 | Treatment and Diagnosis of Cancer - Use of antibodies or binding portions thereof, probes, ligands, or other biological agents which either recognize an extracellular domain of prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) or bind to and are internalized with PSMA. These biological agents can be labeled and used for detection of cancerous tissues, particularly cancerous tissues proximate to or containing vascular endothelial cells, which express an extracellular domain of PSMA. The labeled biological agents can also be used to detect normal, benign hyperplastic, and cancerous prostate epithelial cells or portions thereof. They also can be used alone or bound to a substance effective to ablate or kill such cells as a therapy for prostate or other cancers. Also disclosed are four hybridoma cells lines, each of which produces a monoclonal antibody recognizing extracellular domains of PSMA of normal, benign hyperplastic, and cancerous prostate epithelial cells or portions thereof. | 09-24-2009 |
20090280120 | METHODS OF TREATING PROSTATE CANCER WITH ANTI-PROSTATE SPECIFIC MEMBRANE ANTIGEN ANTIBODIES - Modified antibodies, or antigen-binding fragments thereof, to the extracellular domain of human prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) are provided. The modified anti-PSMA antibodies, or antigen-binding fragments thereof, have been rendered less immunogenic compared to their unmodified counterparts to a given species, e.g., a human. Pharmaceutical compositions including the aforesaid antibodies, nucleic acids, recombinant expression vectors and host cells for making such antibodies and fragments are also disclosed. Methods of using the antibodies of the invention to detect human PSMA, or to ablate or kill a PSMA-expressing cell, e.g., a PSMA-expressing cancer or prostatic cell, either in vitro or in vivo, are also provided. | 11-12-2009 |
20100291113 | Treatment of Proliferative Disorders Using Antibodies to PSMA - Methods of treating cancer in a patient are provided. In some embodiments the method comprises administering an antibody that is capable of binding to the extracellular domain of PSMA. In some embodiments, the method comprises restricting folate intake by the patient. Methods of monitoring cancer therapy are provided as well as kits for treating cancer and kits for monitoring cancer therapy. | 11-18-2010 |
20130225541 | Elevated PSMA Identifies Lethal Prostate Cancers - Prostate cancer (PC) is an entity that encompasses different types of tumors, including adenocarcinomas and non-adenocarcinomas. Adenocarcinomas and non-adenocarcinomas respond to, and therefore should be treated, with different treatments. Even within the adenocarcinomas, the lethality of tumors is highly variable, from low risk/indolent/non-life threatening to high risk/lethal. The inability to accurately predict the behavior of a particular cancer makes treatment decisions difficult and highly inexact. Elevated expression of prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) expression is a molecular hallmark of lethal prostate adenocarcinoma. Assessment of PSMA expression levels to predict the behavior of a particular cancer will be useful in the diagnosis and treatment of PC. | 08-29-2013 |
20130315830 | PSMA as a BioMarker for Androgen Activity in Prostate Cancer - The androgen receptor (AR) is the key driver of prostate differentiation and prostate cancer (PC) progression, and androgen ablation is the cornerstone of advanced PC treatment. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) represents another target of interest in PC. Previous publications have reported inconsistent associations between androgen levels and PSMA expression. Using a panel of prototypical human PC cell lines, this relationship is clarified. PSMA is a biomarker that distinguishes AR-positive/PSMA-positive adenocarcinomas from AR-negative variants. PSMA is a cell surface barometer of androgen activity that can be readily identified by immunohistochemistry and/or in vivo imaging. Given that anti-androgen therapy is likely to remain a cornerstone of PC treatment, the associated up-regulation of PSMA, as well as its other characteristics, makes it a compelling target opportunity in PC. | 11-28-2013 |
20140099257 | Androgen Suppression, Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen and the Concept of Conditionally Enhanced Vulnerability - Anti-androgen therapies represent the cornerstone of prostate cancer (PC) treatment. Yet all PC patients ultimately fail efforts to rein in the androgen receptor (AR). This invention is based on the discovery that prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a highly PC-specific and clinically validated cell surface target, is AR-suppressed and up-regulated in PC as a result of hormonal manipulation. This up-regulation occurs in an unexpected timeframe and it occurs even in the castrate-resistant setting. As a result, hormonal therapy creates a state of conditionally enhanced vulnerability of PC to PSMA-targeted anti-cancer/cytotoxic agents that can be exploited by leveraging anti-AR therapy by the addition of PSMA-targeted agents. We demonstrate this conditionally enhanced vulnerability in a castrate-resistant animal model. The state of conditionally enhanced vulnerability may be relevant for other cancer targets and efforts to screen for them may improve other cancer therapies. | 04-10-2014 |
20150056135 | Treatment of Proliferative Disorders Using Antibodies to PSMA - Methods of treating cancer in a patient are provided. In some embodiments the method comprises administering an antibody that is capable of binding to the extracellular domain of PSMA after first administering a hormonal therapy. | 02-26-2015 |
20150316553 | TREATMENT AND DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER - Use of antibodies or binding portions thereof, probes, ligands, or other biological agents which either recognize an extracellular domain of prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) or bind to and are internalized with PSMA. These biological agents can be labeled and used for detection of cancerous tissues, particularly cancerous tissues proximate to or containing vascular endothelial cells, which express an extracellular domain of PSMA. The labeled biological agents can also be used to detect normal, benign hyperplastic, and cancerous prostate epithelial cells or portions thereof. They also can be used alone or bound to a substance effective to ablate or kill such cells as a therapy for prostate or other cancers. Also disclosed are four hybridoma cells lines, each of which produces a monoclonal antibody recognizing extracellular domains of PSMA of normal, benign hyperplastic, and cancerous prostate epithelial cells or portions thereof. | 11-05-2015 |