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Transgender women remain at risk of prostate cancer and warrant consideration for PSA screening. However, current PSA reference ranges and guidelines are based on data from cisgender men. As these thresholds might be inappropriate in transgender women receiving gender-affirming hormones, we recommend that these patients should undergo screening for prostate cancer at regular intervals and further evaluation for PSA >1 ng/ml or rising PSA. Furthermore patient-centred dialogues should be initiated with patients to ensure awareness of prostate cancer risk.
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted surgical training worldwide, and reconstructive urology training has been neglected at the expense of more urgent life-saving procedures. To help address this problem, virtual reality must become a fundamental training aid in modern reconstructive urology surgery education.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly become one of the most important and transformative technologies of our time, with applications in virtually every field and industry. Among these applications, academic writing is one of the areas that has experienced perhaps the most rapid development and uptake of AI-based tools and methodologies. We argue that use of AI-based tools for scientific writing should widely be adopted.
The cellular action of SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the COVID-19 global pandemic, is dependent on a specific combination of receptors and cofactors. These proteins are now known to be expressed in normal kidney tubule tissue and renal cell carcinoma cells, representing possible targets for budding therapeutic modalities.
Effects of prostate cancer treatment in sex and gender minority groups, which include gay and bisexual men, transgender women, or transfeminine people, can include altered sexual function in relation to receptive anal and neovaginal intercourse and changes to patients’ role-in-sex, as well as changes in sexual pleasure related to the loss of the prostate as a source of sexual pleasure. In this Review, the authors discuss the prostate as a sexual organ and consider the effects of prostate cancer treatment in patients from these under-represented groups, as well as discussing the need for openness and counselling in patients from sexual and gender minorities.
Here, the authors explore how environmentally driven changes in the sperm epigenome can mediate paternal contributions to offspring health. They also describe innovations in human stem cell models that can be used to elucidate the paternal origins of health and disease.
This Perspective covers existing patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) of prostate cancer, and their features and uses in basic and preclinical research. The authors also discuss the need for additional PDXs, and how collaboration in prostate cancer PDX research can be improved.