Abstract

Abstract Background: Survival for patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains dismal and the majority of patients succumb to metastatic disease. Even for those with localized PDAC, most will die from metastatic disease despite margin-negative resection and adjuvant therapy. Therefore, these patients must harbor occult metastatic PDAC at presentation. We have developed a PDAC model of occult liver metastases using patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) to study the growth of PDAC within the metastatic microenvironment of the liver and evaluated the role of KRAS-MEK-ERK signaling on tumor progression. Methods and Results: Extensively characterized low passage, patient-derived KRAS-mutant (Tumors 608, 366, and 654) and wild-type (Tumors 738 and 215) PDAC cells expressing luciferase were injected into the spleens of athymic, nude mice and allowed to circulate for 10 minutes, after which a splenectomy was performed. To evaluate metastatic cell growth kinetics in the liver, tumor burden was monitored by sequential bioluminescent imaging. Each of the PDX tumors exhibited a characteristic and reproducible time to proliferative outgrowth ranging from 20 days (Tumor 608) to greater than 100 days (Tumor 654). To evaluate the role of KRAS signaling in maintaining dormant cell survival and proliferative outgrowth, tumor 608 cells were injected and mice were treated with the MEK inhibitor trametinib (0.3 mg/kg, daily) or control beginning 48 hours post-injection. Trametinib significantly reduced metastatic tumor burden, delayed time to proliferative outgrowth, and greatly prolonged survival as compared to control (med. survival: 114 vs. 43 days, p<0.001). In contrast, in an orthotopic model with 250-500 mm3 tumors trametinib led to limited inhibition in tumor growth for Tumor 608. To characterize these PDAC cells, we isolated Tumor 608 cells from the liver 48 and 72 hours, 10 and 28 days after splenic injection using magnetic column separation with human EpCAM (CD326)-targeted magnetically labeled microbeads. Flow cytometric analyses of retrieved cells revealed that decreased cellular markers of proliferation and increased PARP cleavage correlated with decreased tumor burden observed at these timepoints in mice treated with trametinib. Conclusions: Using a model of occult liver metastatic PDAC, patient-derived tumors exhibited characteristic, albeit different growth kinetics in the liver microenvironment. Further, inhibition of KRAS-MEK-ERK signaling with the MEK inhibitor trametinib decreased metastatic cellular proliferation, increased apoptosis, prolonged metastatic tumor outgrowth, and significantly increased survival. Further investigation into factors promoting PDAC cell survival within the hepatic microenvironment will lead to development of rational therapeutic strategies for patients with occult metastatic PDAC. Citation Format: Timothy Eric Newhook, James M. Lindberg, Sara J. Adair, J. Thomas Parsons, Todd W. Bauer. The MEK inhibitor trametinib delays tumor outgrowth and prolongs survival in a patient-derived mouse model of occult hepatic metastatic pancreatic cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr 4040. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-4040

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