4.7 Article

Genetically Engineered Cancer Models, But Not Xenografts, Faithfully Predict Anticancer Drug Exposure in Melanoma Tumors

Journal

ONCOLOGIST
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 1303-1316

Publisher

ALPHAMED PRESS
DOI: 10.1634/theoncologist.2012-0274

Keywords

GEMM; Microdialysis; Carboplatin pharmacokinetics; Mouse tumor models; Melanoma models; Genetically engineered mouse models

Categories

Funding

  1. University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center Mouse Phase I Unit
  2. Golfers Against Cancer Foundation
  3. National Institutes of Health [RO1 P01-ES014635, UO1-CA141576]
  4. University Cancer Research Fund from the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center
  5. American Cancer Society [PF-10-239-01-TBG]

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Background. Rodent studies are a vital step in the development of novel anticancer therapeutics and are used in pharmacokinetic (PK), toxicology, and efficacy studies. Traditionally, anticancer drug development has relied on xenograft implantation of human cancer cell lines in immunocompromised mice for efficacy screening of a candidate compound. The usefulness of xenograft models for efficacy testing, however, has been questioned, whereas genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) and orthotopic syngeneic transplants (OSTs) may offer some advantages for efficacy assessment. A critical factor influencing the predictability of rodent tumor models is drug PKs, but a comprehensive comparison of plasma and tumor PK parameters among xenograft models, OSTs, GEMMs, and human patients has not been performed. Methods. In this work, we evaluated the plasma and tumor dispositions of an antimelanoma agent, carboplatin, in patients with cutaneous melanoma compared with four different murine melanoma models (one GEMM, one human cell line xenograft, and two OSTs). Results. Using microdialysis to sample carboplatin tumor disposition, we found that OSTs and xenografts were poor predictors of drug exposure in human tumors, whereas the GEMM model exhibited PK parameters similar to those seen in human tumors. Conclusions. The tumor PKs of carboplatin in a GEMM of melanoma more closely resembles the tumor disposition in patients with melanoma than transplanted tumor models. GEMMs show promise in becoming an improved prediction model for intratumoral PKs and response in patients with solid tumors. The Oncologist 2012; 17: 1303-1316

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