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Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies

Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare and aggressive presentation of invasive breast cancer with a 62% to 68% 5-year survival rate. It is the most lethal form of breast cancer, and early recognition and treatment is important for patient survival. Like non-inflammatory breast cancer, IBC compri...

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Autores principales: Eckhardt, Bedrich L., Gagliardi, Maria, Iles, LaKesla, Evans, Kurt, Ivan, Cristina, Liu, Xiuping, Liu, Chang-Gong, Souza, Glauco, Rao, Arvind, Meric-Bernstam, Funda, Ueno, Naoto T., Bartholomeusz, Geoffrey A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5955489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29768500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195932
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author Eckhardt, Bedrich L.
Gagliardi, Maria
Iles, LaKesla
Evans, Kurt
Ivan, Cristina
Liu, Xiuping
Liu, Chang-Gong
Souza, Glauco
Rao, Arvind
Meric-Bernstam, Funda
Ueno, Naoto T.
Bartholomeusz, Geoffrey A.
author_facet Eckhardt, Bedrich L.
Gagliardi, Maria
Iles, LaKesla
Evans, Kurt
Ivan, Cristina
Liu, Xiuping
Liu, Chang-Gong
Souza, Glauco
Rao, Arvind
Meric-Bernstam, Funda
Ueno, Naoto T.
Bartholomeusz, Geoffrey A.
author_sort Eckhardt, Bedrich L.
collection PubMed
description Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare and aggressive presentation of invasive breast cancer with a 62% to 68% 5-year survival rate. It is the most lethal form of breast cancer, and early recognition and treatment is important for patient survival. Like non-inflammatory breast cancer, IBC comprises multiple subtypes, with the triple-negative subtype being overrepresented. Although the current multimodality treatment regime of anthracycline- and taxane-based neoadjuvant therapy, surgery, and radiotherapy has improved the outcome of patients with triple-negative IBC, overall survival continues to be worse than in patients with non-inflammatory locally advanced breast cancer. Translation of new therapies into the clinics to successfully treat IBC has been poor, in part because of the lack of in vitro preclinical models that can accurately predict the response of the original tumor to therapy. We report the generation of a preclinical IBC patient-derived xenograft (PDX)-derived ex vivo (PDXEx) model and show that it closely replicates the tissue architecture of the original PDX tumor harvested from mice. The gene expression profile of our IBC PDXEx model had a high degree of correlation to that of the original tumor. This suggests that the process of generating the PDXEx model did not significantly alter the molecular signature of the original tumor. We demonstrate a high degree of similarity in drug response profile between a PDX mouse model and our PDXEx model generated from the same original PDX tumor tissue and treated with the same panel of drugs, indicating that our PDXEx model had high predictive value in identifying effective tumor-specific therapies. Finally, we used our PDXEx model as a platform for a robotic-based high-throughput drug screen of a 386-drug anti-cancer compound library. The top candidates identified from this drug screen all demonstrated greater therapeutic efficacy than the standard-of-care drugs used in the clinic to treat triple-negative IBC, doxorubicin and paclitaxel. Our PDXEx model is simple, and we are confident that it can be incorporated into a PDX mouse system for use as a first-pass screening platform. This will permit the identification of effective tumor-specific therapies with high predictive value in a resource-, time-, and cost-efficient manner.
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spelling pubmed-59554892018-05-25 Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies Eckhardt, Bedrich L. Gagliardi, Maria Iles, LaKesla Evans, Kurt Ivan, Cristina Liu, Xiuping Liu, Chang-Gong Souza, Glauco Rao, Arvind Meric-Bernstam, Funda Ueno, Naoto T. Bartholomeusz, Geoffrey A. PLoS One Research Article Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare and aggressive presentation of invasive breast cancer with a 62% to 68% 5-year survival rate. It is the most lethal form of breast cancer, and early recognition and treatment is important for patient survival. Like non-inflammatory breast cancer, IBC comprises multiple subtypes, with the triple-negative subtype being overrepresented. Although the current multimodality treatment regime of anthracycline- and taxane-based neoadjuvant therapy, surgery, and radiotherapy has improved the outcome of patients with triple-negative IBC, overall survival continues to be worse than in patients with non-inflammatory locally advanced breast cancer. Translation of new therapies into the clinics to successfully treat IBC has been poor, in part because of the lack of in vitro preclinical models that can accurately predict the response of the original tumor to therapy. We report the generation of a preclinical IBC patient-derived xenograft (PDX)-derived ex vivo (PDXEx) model and show that it closely replicates the tissue architecture of the original PDX tumor harvested from mice. The gene expression profile of our IBC PDXEx model had a high degree of correlation to that of the original tumor. This suggests that the process of generating the PDXEx model did not significantly alter the molecular signature of the original tumor. We demonstrate a high degree of similarity in drug response profile between a PDX mouse model and our PDXEx model generated from the same original PDX tumor tissue and treated with the same panel of drugs, indicating that our PDXEx model had high predictive value in identifying effective tumor-specific therapies. Finally, we used our PDXEx model as a platform for a robotic-based high-throughput drug screen of a 386-drug anti-cancer compound library. The top candidates identified from this drug screen all demonstrated greater therapeutic efficacy than the standard-of-care drugs used in the clinic to treat triple-negative IBC, doxorubicin and paclitaxel. Our PDXEx model is simple, and we are confident that it can be incorporated into a PDX mouse system for use as a first-pass screening platform. This will permit the identification of effective tumor-specific therapies with high predictive value in a resource-, time-, and cost-efficient manner. Public Library of Science 2018-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5955489/ /pubmed/29768500 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195932 Text en © 2018 Eckhardt et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Eckhardt, Bedrich L.
Gagliardi, Maria
Iles, LaKesla
Evans, Kurt
Ivan, Cristina
Liu, Xiuping
Liu, Chang-Gong
Souza, Glauco
Rao, Arvind
Meric-Bernstam, Funda
Ueno, Naoto T.
Bartholomeusz, Geoffrey A.
Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title_full Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title_fullStr Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title_full_unstemmed Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title_short Clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
title_sort clinically relevant inflammatory breast cancer patient-derived xenograft–derived ex vivo model for evaluation of tumor-specific therapies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5955489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29768500
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195932
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