| Literature DB >> 29384032 |
Kei Kawaguchi1,2,3, Kentaro Igarashi1,2, Tasuku Kiyuna1,2, Kentaro Miyake1,2, Masuyo Miyake1,2, Takashi Murakami1,2, Bartosz Chmielowski4, Scott D Nelson5, Tara A Russell6, Sarah M Dry5, Yunfeng Li5, Arun S Singh4, Michiaki Unno3, Fritz C Eilber6, Robert M Hoffman1,2.
Abstract
Doxorubicin (DOX) is often first-line treatment of undifferentiated/unclassified soft tissue sarcoma (USTS). However, the DOX response rate for USTS patients is low. Individualized precision-medicine technology that could identify DOX responders as well as non-responders would be of high value to cancer patients. In the present study, we established 5 patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) nude mouse models from 5 USTS patients and evaluated the efficacy of DOX in each PDOX model. USTS's were grown orthotopically in the right thigh of nude mice to establish the PDOX models. Two weeks after implantation, the mouse models were randomized into two groups of 8 mice each: untreated control; and DOX (3 mg/kg, i.p., once a week for 2 weeks). DOX showed significant growth inhibition in only 2 USTS PDOX models out of 5 (p = 0.0054, p = 0.0055, respectively) on day 14 after initiation. DOX was ineffective in the other 3 PDOX models. However, even in the DOX-sensitive cases, DOX could not regress the PDOX tumors responding to treatment. The present study has important implications since this is the first in vivo study to compare the DOX sensitivity for USTS on multiple patient tumors. We showed that only two of five USTS were responsive to DOX, despite DOX being first line chemotherapy for USTS. The 3 resistant cases should not be treated with DOX clinically, in order to spare the patients' unnecessary toxicity. This PDOX model is useful for precise individualized drug sensitivity testing, especially for rare heterogeneous recalcitrant sarcomas such as USTS.Entities:
Keywords: PDOX; Soft tissue sarcoma (STS); doxorubicin; drug-response; individualized therapy; nude mice; precision therapy; undifferentiated/unclassified soft tissue sarcoma (USTS)
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29384032 PMCID: PMC5969558 DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2017.1421876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Cycle ISSN: 1551-4005 Impact factor: 4.534