| Literature DB >> 23750336 |
Avital Gaziel-Sovran1, Iman Osman, Eva Hernando.
Abstract
Brain metastasis (B-Met) from melanoma remains mostly incurable and the main cause of death from the disease. Early stage clinical trials and case studies show some promise for targeted therapies in the treatment of melanoma B-Met. However, the progression-free survival for currently available therapies, although significantly improved, is still very short. The development of new potent agents to eradicate melanoma B-Met relies on the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms that allow melanoma cells to reach and colonize the brain. The discovery of such mechanisms depends heavily on pre-clinical models that enable the testing of candidate factors and therapeutic agents in vivo. In this review we summarize the effects of available targeted therapies on melanoma B-Met in the clinic. We provide an overview of existing pre-clinical models to study the disease and discuss specific molecules and mechanisms reported to modulate different aspects of melanoma B-Met and finally, by integrating both clinical and basic data, we summarize both opportunities and challenges currently presented to researchers in the field.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; brain metastasis; brain tropism; melanoma; melanoma brain metastasis; metastasis; therapy-related
Year: 2013 PMID: 23750336 PMCID: PMC3668495 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
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| Model | Technique | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous brain metastasis (Cruz-Munoz et al., | Subcutaneous implementation of pre-selected clones followed by tumor resection. Metastatic disease in the brain is allowed to occur spontaneously from metastasizing cells leaving the subcutaneous implementation site | Recreates the multiple sequential steps that are associated with the metastatic cascade, making it closely resembled to the clinical disease Suitable for pre-clinical testing of adjuvant therapies | Relatively low throughput Very long latency period needed for metastatic disease in the brain to become evident Relatively low incidence Limited number of available pre-selected cell lines to be used |
| Intra-carotid injection (Fujimaki et al., | Cells are injected into the internal carotid artery | Allows for controlled delivery of cancer cells Offers a short time for metastatic disease to manifest Availability of many well-characterized cell lines | Technically challenging Does not reflect the complete series of events involved in the metastatic process Extremely short latency between tumor induction and mortality Mostly leptomeningeal metastases are formed |
| Intra-cardiac injection (Izraely et al., | Cells are injected into the left ventricle of the heart | Relatively high-throughput Recapitulates most relevant stages of the metastatic spread to the brain Technically feasible May produce parenchymal lesions Reasonable latency between inoculation to appearance of brain metastasis – may be used for pre-clinical testing of adjuvant therapies | Does not reflect the complete series of events involved in the metastatic process Limited number of available pre-selected cell lines to be used |
| Injection into chick embryo (Busch et al., | Cells are injected into the rhombencephalic brain vesicle of a 2-day-chick embryo. Two to three days post-injection tumor formation is studied | Fast Controlled delivery of cells May be used with multiple cell lines | Physiological relevance is not yet established Limited to study certain processes such as extravasation and local invasion |
Figure 1Molecular determinants of melanoma brain metastasis. Molecular alterations may occur on all consecutive steps that support the metastatic process of melanoma cells to the brain. Alterations in specific factors may support processes at the primary tumor site and endow a subset of cells with the ability to reach the brain (represented by green cells). Other factors may direct migration to the brain via chemotaxis, or promote adhesion and extravasation through the BBB. Lastly, inside the brain, other factors facilitate several processes that allow the successful colonization of the tissue such as vessel co-option (A), angiogenesis (B), seeding (C), growth (D), survival (E), or invasiveness (F). Although not yet demonstrated for melanoma, it is possible that metastatic spread to the brain may also originate from other visceral metastatic sites such as the lung or the liver (“metastasis of metastasis”).