“…The first one is the high prevalence since it’s one of the leading cancers in men and one of the leading causes of deaths among men worldwide ( Gomella, 2017 ; Schatten, 2018 ; Zhang et al, 2022a ). The second characteristic is the high incidence of drug resistance, since more than 90% of PCa will eventually develop resistance to androgen-depredation therapy (ADT), termed as castration-resistant PCa (CRPC), and later second resistance to subsequent chemotherapies ( Armstrong and Gao, 2015 ; Cohen et al, 2021 ; Liotti et al, 2021 ; Morel et al, 2021 ; Ji et al, 2022 ; Peery et al, 2022 ). It’s known that various factors contribute to the development of drug resistance in PCa, such as the alteration/mutation of androgen receptor (AR) or oncogenes, metabolism adaptation, overexpression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, apoptosis resistance, enhanced DNA repair and cellular defensive systems against toxic inducers, etc.…”