| Literature DB >> 35565413 |
Jane Ru Choi1, Gül Kozalak2,3, Ighli di Bari4, Quratulain Babar5, Zahra Niknam6, Yousef Rasmi7,8, Kar Wey Yong9.
Abstract
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, and its incidence is steadily increasing. Although years of research have been conducted on cancer treatment, clinical treatment options for cancers are still limited. Animal cancer models have been widely used for studies of cancer therapeutics, but these models have been associated with many concerns, including inaccuracy in the representation of human cancers, high cost and ethical issues. Therefore, in vitro human cancer models are being developed quickly to fulfill the increasing demand for more relevant models in order to get a better knowledge of human cancers and to find novel treatments. This review summarizes the development of in vitro human cancer models for biomedical applications. We first review the latest development in the field by detailing various types of in vitro human cancer models, including transwell-based models, tumor spheroids, microfluidic tumor-microvascular systems and scaffold-based models. The advantages and limitations of each model, as well as their biomedical applications, are summarized, including therapeutic development, assessment of tumor cell migration, metastasis and invasion and discovery of key cancer markers. Finally, the existing challenges and future perspectives are briefly discussed.Entities:
Keywords: biomedical applications; cancer markers; human cancers; in vitro model; therapeutic development; tumor biology
Year: 2022 PMID: 35565413 PMCID: PMC9099454 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14092284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Transwell-based cancer model. (A) Basic cell invasion assay. Adapted with permission from [14] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2020). (B) Intravasation and extravasation assays. Adapted with permission from [18] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2021).
Figure 2Tumor spheroids. (A) A device that allows long-term culture of hanging drop tumor spheroids. Adapted with permission from [30] © Elsevier (2021). (B) A multisize hanging drop tumor spheroid array. Adapted with permission from [32] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2021). (C) A microfluidic device that traps tumor cells in droplets for formation of tumor spheroids with uniform cell distribution. Adapted with permission from [33] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2021). (D) Tumor spheroid formation induced through magnetic levitation. Adapted with permission from [34] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2020).
Figure 3Microfluidic tumor-microvascular model. (A) OrganoPlate tumor microvascular models with high throughput screening capabilities. Adapted with permission from [55] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2021). (B) A microfluidic chip with functional, cross-linked tumor microvascular networks. Adapted with permission from [57] © ACS Publications (2021).
Figure 4Scaffold-based cancer model. (A) Preparation of decellularized extracellular matrix scaffold with different stiffness for in vitro cancer model development. Adapted with permission from [76] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2021). (B) Fabrication of a mechanically stable bioprinted scaffold-based cancer model. Adapted with permission from [77] © ACS Publications (2021).
Advantages and limitations of the existing types of in vitro cancer models.
| Type of In Vitro Cancer Model | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Transwell-based [ | Used for studying invasiveness and metastatic potential of tumor cells in a low cost and high throughput manner. | Low physiological relevance. |
| Tumor spheroid [ | Can reproduce 3D architecture of tumors and hypoxic conditions in the spheroid center with direct and paracrine intercellular interactions that are important for TME. | Lack of interaction between ECM and cells. |
| Microfluidic-tumor microvascular system [ | Can reproduce fluid flow, shear stress and chemical gradient profiles that resemble the in vivo conditions. | Expensive and requires complicated equipment. |
| Scaffold-based [ | Resemble the in vivo conditions with complex intercellular interactions and cell-ECM interactions. | Expensive for large-scale production. |
Figure 5In vitro human cancer models for T cell therapy development. Adapted with permission from [103] © Elsevier (2018).
Figure 6In vitro human cancer models for photodynamic therapy development. Adapted with permission from [109] © ACS Publications (2020).
Figure 7In vitro human cancer models for assessment of tumor biology. Adapted with permission from [123] © Creative Commons Attribution License (2019).
Figure 8In vitro human cancer models for discovery of key prognostic cancer biomarkers. Adapted with permission from [136] © Elsevier (2019).