| Literature DB >> 24665205 |
Catherine Hibberd1, Davina A F Cossigny2, Gerald M Y Quan1.
Abstract
The bony skeleton is one of the most common sites of metastatic spread of cancer and is a significant source of morbidity in cancer patients, causing pain and pathologic fracture, impaired ambulatory ability, and poorer quality of life. Animal cancer models of skeletal metastases are essential for better understanding of the molecular pathways behind metastatic spread and local growth and invasion of bone, to enable analysis of host-tumor cell interactions, identify barriers to the metastatic process, and to provide platforms to develop and test novel therapies prior to clinical application in human patients. Thus, the ideal model should be clinically relevant, reproducible and representative of the human condition. This review summarizes the current in vivo animal models used in the study of cancer metastases of the skeleton.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; cancer; metastasis; skeletal; tumor
Year: 2013 PMID: 24665205 PMCID: PMC3941154 DOI: 10.4137/CGM.S11284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Growth Metastasis ISSN: 1179-0644
Established in vivo animal models of skeletal metastases.
| Ref. | Animal | Cancer cell line | Method of inoculation | Location of skeletal metastases | % Success rate for skeletal metastases | Observed metastases in other organs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female C57BL/6 | B16-G3.26 | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones, pelvis | >95% | Lungs, liver, ovaries | |
| C57BL/6 | B16-F10 | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones, pelvis | 100% | Visceral | |
| Female C57BL/6 | B16-G3.26 | Intracardiac | Spine | NS | NS | |
| Female C57BL/6 | B16-F1 | Intracardiac | Femur | 60–100% | Visceral | |
| C57BL/6 (immunocompetent) | RM1 (bone metastasizing subclone) | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones, skull, scapula | >95% | Kidney, adrenals, other soft tissues | |
| Male SCID | PC-3 | Orthotopic | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Nude | PC-3 (PC-3M highly metastatic sub-line) | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones | NS | NS | |
| Male nude | IGR-CaP1 | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones, mandible | 55% (intracardiac) | Liver, lung, kidney | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 (bone-metastasizing subclone) | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones | 100% (intracardiac) | Brain, lung (intracardiac) | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 | Orthotopic (tibia) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 | Intracardiac | Femur | NS | Lung | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 (B02 subclone) | Tail vein | Long bones | NS | Nil | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 (F10 subclone) | Orthotopic (femur) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-435 | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones, pelvis, mandible | NS | NS | |
| Female nude | 4T1.2 | Intracardiac | Spine, femur | 65% (4T1.2) | Lung | |
| Female nude | 4T1E/M3 | Tail vein | Spine | 70% (4T1E/M3) | Lung | |
| Female nude | 4526 murine mammary | Intracardiac | Spine | 100% | NS | |
| Female nude | 786–0 (highly metastatic subclone) | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones | 100% | Nil | |
| SCID | ACHN | Orthotopic (lamina) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Nude | PC-14 | Orthotopic (L3 vertebra) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Male SCID | H460 | Orthotopic | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Female nude | A20 | Tail vein | Spine | 80% | Liver, lymph nodes | |
| Male nude | WRO | Orthotopic (tibia) | n/a | 80% | n/a | |
| Nude | SK-N-MC | Intracardiac | Spine | NS | NS | |
| Nude | HeLA | Intracardiac | Spine | NS | Intradural, brain | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 (RBC3 subclone) | Intracardiac | Spine, long bones | 50–86% | NS | |
| Female nude | MDA-MB-231 | Orthotopic (L5 vertebra) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Nude | MDA-MB-231 | Intra-arterial | Hindlimb long bones | 100% | Nil | |
| Female nude | MT-1 | Intracardiac | Spine | 100% | NS | |
| Nude | MT-1 | Intracardiac | Spine | NS | NS | |
| Nude | MT-1 | Intracardiac | Spine | 80% | Intradural | |
| Female nude | CRL-1666 | Orthotopic (L6 vertebra) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Male wistar | Walker 256 | Intra-arterial | Hindlimb long bones | 90% | Nil | |
| New Zealand white | VX2 | Orthotopic (thoracic vertebra, tibia) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Male Japanese white | VX2 | Orthotopic (L3 vertebra) | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Mongrel dogs | DPC-1 | Prostate | Pelvis | 15% | Lung, lymph nodes |
Abbreviations: NS, not specified; n/a, not applicable (given direct inoculation of tumour cells into bone); SCEA, superficial caudal epigastric artery (to hindlimb); CA, carcinoma; RCC, renal cell carcinoma.
Figure 1Representative images of established spinal cancer (arrows) following orthotopic injection of PC-3 human prostate cancer cells in the vertebral body of the thoracolumbar junction in a nude mouse. A) Dissected spine specimen; B) Sagittal, and C) axial micro-CT images demonstrating lytic bony lesion and cortical destruction; D) Histological cross-section showing tumor invasion of vertebral bone marrow and encroachment onto the spinal cord (SC); E) Control histological cross-section.
Imaging modalities available for analysis of skeletal metastases in animal models.
| Imaging method | Requirement | Detection | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plain radiographs | Radiographic exposure appropriate to animal size and tissue density | Only capable of detecting large lesions (eg. >50% vertebral body involvement) or highly sclerotic lesions | Cheap, easy to use, readily available, quick, non-invasive. | Not sensitive at detecting early or small tumours. |
| Bioluminescence Imaging | Cancer cell gene transfection with bioluminescent reporter protein (eg. luciferase). | Reported detectable size of micrometastasis approximately 0.5 cubic mm | Relatively cheap, useful for longitudinal monitoring of tumour growth | Requires systemic injection of substrate to generate photon emission. |
| Fluorescence imaging | Cancer cell gene transfection with fluorescent reporter protein (eg. green fluorescence protein). | Reported detectable size of micrometastases approximately 0.06 mm diameter at a depth of 0.5 mm and 1.8 mm diameter at a depth of 2.2 mm | Relatively cheap, useful for longitudinal monitoring of tumour growth. | Detection rate influenced by depth of tissue. |
| Nuclear Medicine scans | Injection of radioactive isotope/tracer, assessment dependent upon specific isotope (eg. perfusion, bone turnover, cell glucose metabolism) | May detect signal from established tumours from day 1 post inoculation. | Bone scan sensitive for osteoblastic bone lesions. | Lack specificity due to tracer accumulation in any area of increased bone turnover or metabolism. |
| Computed Tomography | Small animal micro-CT with appropriate radiation dose and resolution producing high-resolution images (typically 100 microns or less), data acquisition typically takes 5 to 30 minutes | Very high sensitivity & specificity for detection of bone lesions, dependent on resolution of the imaging and duration of the scan | More sensitive than plain radiographs. | Expensive infrastructure. |
| Magnetic Resonance Imaging | Small animal MRI scanner with higher strength magnetic field gradients and higher sensitivity radiofrequency coils. | Reported detectable size of micrometastasis approximately 0.3 cubic mm | More sensitive than plain radiographs. | Expensive infrastructure. |