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Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies

We present a method for estimating the empirical dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves from tumor growth delay (TGD) studies. This improves on current common methods of TGD analysis, such as T/C ratio and doubling times, by providing a more detailed treatment effect and overcomes their lack of repro...

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Autores principales: Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy, Keir, Stephen T., Ashcraft, Kathleen A., Boss, Mary-Keara, Dewhirst, Mark W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4546495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25986925
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author Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy
Keir, Stephen T.
Ashcraft, Kathleen A.
Boss, Mary-Keara
Dewhirst, Mark W.
author_facet Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy
Keir, Stephen T.
Ashcraft, Kathleen A.
Boss, Mary-Keara
Dewhirst, Mark W.
author_sort Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy
collection PubMed
description We present a method for estimating the empirical dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves from tumor growth delay (TGD) studies. This improves on current common methods of TGD analysis, such as T/C ratio and doubling times, by providing a more detailed treatment effect and overcomes their lack of reproducibility. The methodology doesn't presuppose any prior form for the treatment effect dynamics and is shown to give consistent estimates with missing data. The method is illustrated by application to real data from TGD studies involving three types of therapy. Firstly, we demonstrate that radiotherapy induces a sharp peak in inhibition in a FaDu model. The height, duration and timing of the peak increase linearly with radiation dose. Second, we demonstrate that a combination of temozolomide and an experimental therapy in a glioma PDX model yields an effect, similar to an additive version of the DTE curves for the mono-therapies, except that there is a 30 day delay in peak inhibition. In the third study, we consider the DTE of anti-angiogenic therapy in glioma. We show that resulting DTE curves are flat. We discuss how features of the DTE curves should be interpreted and potentially used to improve therapy.
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spelling pubmed-45464952015-08-27 Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy Keir, Stephen T. Ashcraft, Kathleen A. Boss, Mary-Keara Dewhirst, Mark W. Oncotarget Research Paper We present a method for estimating the empirical dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves from tumor growth delay (TGD) studies. This improves on current common methods of TGD analysis, such as T/C ratio and doubling times, by providing a more detailed treatment effect and overcomes their lack of reproducibility. The methodology doesn't presuppose any prior form for the treatment effect dynamics and is shown to give consistent estimates with missing data. The method is illustrated by application to real data from TGD studies involving three types of therapy. Firstly, we demonstrate that radiotherapy induces a sharp peak in inhibition in a FaDu model. The height, duration and timing of the peak increase linearly with radiation dose. Second, we demonstrate that a combination of temozolomide and an experimental therapy in a glioma PDX model yields an effect, similar to an additive version of the DTE curves for the mono-therapies, except that there is a 30 day delay in peak inhibition. In the third study, we consider the DTE of anti-angiogenic therapy in glioma. We show that resulting DTE curves are flat. We discuss how features of the DTE curves should be interpreted and potentially used to improve therapy. Impact Journals LLC 2015-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4546495/ /pubmed/25986925 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Choudhury et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Choudhury, Kingshuk Roy
Keir, Stephen T.
Ashcraft, Kathleen A.
Boss, Mary-Keara
Dewhirst, Mark W.
Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title_full Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title_fullStr Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title_short Dynamic treatment effect (DTE) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
title_sort dynamic treatment effect (dte) curves reveal the mode of action for standard and experimental cancer therapies
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4546495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25986925
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