Literature DB >> 33348855

Establishment of a Mouse Ovarian Cancer and Peritoneal Metastasis Model to Study Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy.

Günther A Rezniczek1, Jonathan Buggisch2, Julien Sobilo3, Alexandre Launay3, Stéphanie Lerondel3, Alain Le Pape3, Mehdi Ouaissi4, Daniel Göhler5,6, Metin Senkal7, Urs Giger-Pabst2, Clemens B Tempfer1.   

Abstract

Intraperitoneal chemotherapy (IPC) is a locoregional treatment option in patients with peritoneal metastases (PM). Here, we present an ovarian cancer (OC)-derived PM mouse model for the study of different forms of IPC. Xenograft cell proliferation (luciferase-transfected OVCAR3 and SKOV3 clones) and growth kinetics were assessed using PET scan, bioluminescence imaging (BLI), and histological tumor analysis. Liquid IPC was achieved by intraperitoneal injection with/without capnoperitoneum (6-7 mmHg). Pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC) was mimicked using an intratracheal drug aerosol administration system (micro-nozzle), which, as demonstrated by ex vivo granulometric analysis using laser diffraction spectrometry, produced a polydisperse, bimodal aerosol with a volume-weighted median diameter of (26.49 ± 2.76) µm. Distribution of Tc-99m-labeled doxorubicin in mice was characterized using SPECT and was dependent on the delivery mode and most homogeneous when the micro-nozzle was used. A total of 2 mg doxorubicin per kg body weight was determined to be the optimally effective and tolerable dose to achieve at least 50% tumor reduction. Repeated PIPAC (four times at seven-day-intervals) with doxorubicin in SKOV3-luc tumor-bearing mice resulted in halted tumor proliferation and tumor load reduced after the second round of PIPAC versus controls and the number of tumor nodules was significantly reduced (27.7 ± 9.5 vs. 57.3 ± 9.5; p = 0.0003). Thus, we established the first mouse model of OC PM for the study of IPC using a human xenograft with SKOV3 cells and an experimental IPC setup with a miniaturized nozzle. Repeated IPC was feasible and demonstrated time-dependent anti-tumor activity.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aerosol; chemotherapy; intraperitoneal; metastasis; mouse model; ovarian cancer; peritoneal; pressurized

Year:  2020        PMID: 33348855     DOI: 10.3390/cancers12123818

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancers (Basel)        ISSN: 2072-6694            Impact factor:   6.639


  2 in total

Review 1.  Is PIPAC a Treatment Option in Upper and Lower Gastrointestinal Cancer with Peritoneal Metastasis?

Authors:  Safak Guel-Klein; Miguel Enrique Alberto Vilchez; Wim Ceelen; Beate Rau; Andreas Brandl
Journal:  Visc Med       Date:  2022-03-21

2.  Development of a rat capnoperitoneum phantom to study drug aerosol deposition in the context of anticancer research on peritoneal carcinomatosis.

Authors:  Daniel Göhler; Ralf Gritzki; Antje Geldner; Franz Lohse; Stephan Große; Julien Sobilo; Clemens Felsmann; Jonathan R Buggisch; Alain Le Pape; Andreas Rudolph; Michael Stintz; Urs Giger-Pabst
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-11-08       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.