Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer care at Mayo Clinic

Radiopharmaceuticals for advanced prostate cancer

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Dan Childs, M.D., Oncologist: For a long time, we thought advanced prostate cancer was incurable. But now we see some men who have come in with metastatic prostate cancer. We treat all of the sites that we can see on the PET scan. Eventually, we take them off all hormone therapy, and we're not seeing signs of their cancer grow for a long time. That makes me really hopeful for curing men with advanced prostate cancer.

Jacob Orme, M.D., Ph.D, Oncologist: Advanced prostate cancer means that that cancer, even though it comes from the prostate, is moved somewhere else. That can be in the bones, which is a real common place for it to go, but it can be in the lungs and the liver and other parts of the body. But if this cancer is moved somewhere else, we have to do something that's going to take care of it from head to toe. And so we move then in advanced prostate cancer from things that are local treatments like surgery, radiation, cryoablation into things that are going to work throughout the body.

Dr. Childs: Fortunately, right now, we have more life-prolonging therapies for prostate cancer than ever before. We can use chemotherapies that have been available for a number of years. We can use hormone therapies which help shrink or slow the growth of the cancer. We can use a new kind of therapy called radiopharmaceuticals. This has been a really important innovation within the last decade.

Dr. Orme: The way that lutetium PSMA works right now, it's this bit of molecular velcro that sticks to the PSA on the surface of the cancer cell and radioactive lutetium. And so you inject it into the bloodstream, it goes all over, and it sticks to the surface of those cancer cells and delivers that radiation specifically to those cancer cells. It's an amazing process, and we've seen some pretty fantastic results from that.

When we do these advanced scans, where we're doing a molecular scan, and you can see where this cancer is, that's incredibly helpful for us to know as medical oncologists because we want to know the extent of where things are and that helps us to know how to treat them.

Dr. Childs: We also have the ability to take pictures the day after treatment and understand whether the medication is going to the location we desire it to go to.

Geoffrey Johnson, M.D., Ph.D., Nuclear Specialist, Radiologist: Why does a patient who has advanced prostate cancer like this kind of theragnostic or radio pharmaceutical therapy? Overwhelmingly, it's the low side effects. Because we were able to design the drugs and we were able to see exactly where they went, we know they're not radiating or at least very minimally radiating anything else. So the guys are on the golf course talking to their buddies and they're saying things, and we have this in our data, I feel better taking this therapy than before I had it.

We're able to find the cancer. We're able to track the tumors as they go through therapy in ways that pretty much almost no one else can do to really guide the therapy. And even to say, if the therapy is not working in some of the tumors, but it's working in others, we can actually see that on our imaging, and we can then bring in other therapies like external beam radiation to treat the ones that aren't responding. As a physician or as a nurse or as somebody helping in the care of these patients, it's really rewarding.

Mayo Clinic is proud that all of our three major sites are qualified as comprehensive radiopharmaceutical therapy Centers of Excellence. So we come in with a team — we've got urologists, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, nuke med physicians, any other physicians that that particular patient needs. I think that's Mayo's specialty — our team approach.

Dr. Childs: With any anti-cancer therapy that you're giving, including radio pharmaceuticals, you want to make sure that you have the infrastructure in place. You want to make sure you have a team of well-trained physicians, well-trained nurses, and well-trained technicians. Mayo Clinic laid the groundwork for this treatment many months and even years prior to its approval so that once it was available for men with prostate cancer, we were ready to go and ready to support our patients.

Dr. Johnson: I would say that if you come to the Mayo Clinic, it would be our commitment that you leave feeling like we're working as a team. We're all coming together for your best interest first.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Mayo Clinic doctors provide expert care for people with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).

Your Mayo Clinic care team

People with advanced prostate cancer receive care from doctors at Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center. Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center with three locations in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota.

At Mayo Clinic, doctors and specialists work in multidisciplinary teams to address all of your needs and explore all of your options. Benefits of the team approach include:

Advanced diagnosis and treatment

Mayo Clinic specialists have access to the latest diagnosis and treatment innovations to provide you with an accurate diagnosis and effective treatment plan. This includes:

  • Detecting cancer recurrence sooner. Mayo Clinic was the first medical center to receive U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval to prepare and administer the choline C-11 PET scan, which helped doctors find prostate cancer recurrence sooner than other imaging available at the time. This innovation in prostate cancer imaging continues, as Mayo Clinic offers the latest tests, such as the PSMA PET scan.
  • A full range of treatments to consider. Mayo Clinic doctors will work with you to review all of your treatment options and choose the treatment that best suits your needs and goals. The range of treatments offered includes external beam radiation therapy, stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), proton therapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy and radiopharmaceutical treatments.
  • Access to the latest in clinical trials. Mayo Clinic doctors participate in clinical trials studying the latest treatments and new ways to use existing treatments. Taking part in a clinical trial may give you access to new medicines for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Talk with your healthcare team about which trials might be a good fit for you.

Expertise and rankings

Mayo Clinic doctors are widely respected for their experience and expertise in caring for people with prostate cancer recurrence. When you seek care at Mayo Clinic, you can expect:

  • Personalized care. Mayo Clinic urologists, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, nuclear medicine specialists, pathologists and radiologists work together to ensure all of your needs are addressed when creating your customized treatment plan.
  • Experience you can trust. Each year, more than 23,000 people with prostate cancer receive care at Mayo Clinic. This experience means your care team is prepared with knowledge and resources to provide you with exactly the care you need.
  • Center of excellence for radiopharmaceutical treatments. The Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging has designated Mayo Clinic as a Comprehensive Radiopharmaceutical Therapy Center of Excellence. This honor extends to the Mayo Clinic campuses in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota.
  • Nationally recognized expertise. Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center meets the strict standards for a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center. These standards recognize scientific excellence and a multispecialty approach focused on cancer prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center with three locations in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota.

Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, and Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona, are ranked among the Best Hospitals for cancer by U.S. News & World Report. Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, is ranked as the top hospital in Minnesota and Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona, is ranked as the top hospital in Arizona.

More information about billing and insurance:

Mayo Clinic in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota

Mayo Clinic Health System

Dec. 24, 2025

Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC)