A new preclinical model using CRISPR, an advanced technology that allows scientists to cut and edit genes, has given Weill Cornell Medicine researchers and their colleagues a deeper insight into how prostate cancer spreads or metastasizes.
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onto Animal Models - GEG Tech top picks November 5, 2024 6:20 AM
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Around 12% of men are diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime. When prostate cancer is confined to the primary tumor, survival is close to 100%. When the cancer spreads or metastasizes, the patient's chances of survival drop to less than 40%. In a recent study, published on September 23 in Cancer Discovery, scientists have mapped the complex routes taken by metastatic prostate cancer cells as they move through the body by creating a new mouse model called EvoCaP and using CRISPR and a barcode system. They observed that while the primary tumor contained many prostate cancer cells, most metastases began with a small number of aggressive clones emerging from the tumor and moving to the bones, liver, lungs and lymph nodes. They also observed that once most cancer cells spread to an organ, they were likely to stay there rather than spread to another area, with just a few closely related cells instigating additional spread. A better understanding of prostate cancer metastasis opens the way to better treatments.