| Literature DB >> 27293382 |
Kyung-Min Kim1, Jin-Kyoung Shim2, Jong Hee Chang2, Ji-Hyun Lee2, Se-Hoon Kim3, Junjeong Choi4, Junseong Park2, Eui-Hyun Kim2, Sun Ho Kim2, Yong-Min Huh5, Su-Jae Lee6, Jae-Ho Cheong7, Seok-Gu Kang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the continuing development of new anti-cancer drugs comes a need for preclinical experimental models capable of predicting the clinical activity of these novel agents in cancer patients. However existing models have a limited ability to recapitulate the clinical characteristics and associated drug sensitivity of tumors. Among the more promising approaches for improving preclinical models is direct implantation of patient-derived tumor tissue into immunocompromised mice, such as athymic nude or non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice. In the current study, we attempted to develop patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models using tissue fragments from surgical samples of brain tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Glioblastoma; Model failure; Patient-derived xenograft; Primitive neuro-ectodermal tumor; Tissue fragment
Year: 2016 PMID: 27293382 PMCID: PMC4901492 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-016-0319-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Patient characteristics
| Age | Sex | WHO grade | Pathology | MGMTa | IDH1b | P53 | 1p/19q | Ki-67 L.I. | EGFRg | No. of implanted mice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case #1 | 24 | M | IV | GBMc | Methylation | Wild type | Wild type | Intact | 5 % | 0 | 3 |
| Case #2 | 61 | M | IV | GBMc | Unmethylation | Wild type | 5 % | LOH/intact | Focal 20–30 % and overall 5 % | 3+ | 3 |
| Case #3 | 24 | M | IV | GBMc | Unmethylation | Wild type | 80–90 % | Intact | 50 % | 2–3+ | 3 |
| Case #4 | 50 | M | IV | GBMc | Methylation | Mutation | NA | NA | NA | NA | 3 |
| Case #5 | 62 | F | IV | GBMc | Methylation | Wild type | Wild type | Intact | 5–6 % | 3+ | 4 |
| Case #6 | 11 | M | IV | GBMc | Unmethylation | Wild type | 50–60 % | Intact | 70–80 % | 0 | 3 |
| Case #7 | 26 | M | IV | GBMc | Unmethylation | Wild type | 50–60 % | LOHf | 40–50 % | 2–3+ | 3 |
| Case #8 | 1.3 | M | IV | PNETd | NAe | NA | NA | NA | 50–60 % | NA | 3 |
a O(6)-methylguanine methyltransferase
b Isocitrate dehydrogenase 1
c Glioblastoma
d Primitive neuroectodermal tumor
e Non-available
f Loss of heterozygosity
g Epidermal growth factor receptor amplification
Fig. 1Methods for developing PDX mouse models. Athymic mice received patient-derived surgical brain tumor tissue fragments (~3 mm3) via two different injection methods: 21 gauge cut-down syringe and pipette
Fig. 2Example of a PDX data set. Each data set included the pathology of the donor patient, an MRI (T1 axial enhancement) image of the donor patient, PDX number, injection method, lifetime of the PDX, and an H&E-stained histological section of PDX brain tissue. This data set corresponds to that for tumor tissue fragments from a glioblastoma patient with a T1 contrast-enhanced lesion in the right temporoparietal lobe implanted into PDX mouse #22 through a pipette. No xenograft patient-derived tumor tissue fragments were detected in H&E-stained histological sections of brain tissue from this mouse, as confirmed by Neuro-pathologists
Tissue fragment implantation results
| Method | No. of mice | No. of deathsa | No. of non-tumor–bearing mice | Establishment rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cut-down syringe | 17 | 4 | 13 | 0 |
| Pipette | 8 | 1 | 7 | 0 |
a Surgical complications