| Literature DB >> 32964941 |
Anneliese Fortuna-Costa1, Regina Alcantara Granato2, Walter Meohas3, Ana Cristina de Sá Lopes3, Anabela Cunha Caruso1, Rafael Castro E Silva Pinheiro3, Pedro da Gama d'Eça3, Rhayra Braga Dias1, Jamila Alessandra Perini1, Ana Paula Fernandes Barbosa4, Renato Augusto Moreira de Sá5, João Antonio Matheus Guimarães1, Samuel S Murray6, Maria Eugenia Leite Duarte7.
Abstract
Although osteosarcoma is a rare disease, with a global incidence rate estimated at 5.0/million/year, it is the most frequent primary bone sarcoma in children and adolescents. In translational research, the patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model is considered an authentic in vivo model for several types of cancer, as tumorgrafts faithfully retain the biological characteristics of the primary tumors. Our goal was to investigate the association between PDX formation and clinical findings of osteosarcoma patients and the ability of the model to preserve in immunocompromized mice the characteristics of the parental tumor. A fresh sample of the patient tumor obtained from a representative biopsy or from surgical resection was implanted into nude mice. When tumor outgrowths reached ~1,500mm³, fresh PDX fragments were re-transplanted into new hosts. Engraftment in mice was obtained after a latency period of 19-225 days (median 92 days) in 40.54% of the implanted samples. We confirmed the histopathological fidelity between the patient tumor and their respective established PDXs, including the expression of biomarkers. PDX take rate was higher in surgical resection samples, in post-chemotherapy surgical samples and in samples from patients with metastatic disease at presentation. In conclusion, we have shown that the osteosarcoma PDX model reliably recapitulates the morphological aspects of the human disease after serial passage in mice. The observation that more aggressive forms of osteosarcoma, including those with metastatic disease at presentation, have a higher efficiency to generate PDXs provides a promising scenario to address several unanswered issues in clinical oncology.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32964941 DOI: 10.14670/HH-18-256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Histol Histopathol ISSN: 0213-3911 Impact factor: 2.303