Abstract

Abstract Background: Lymphovascular invasion (LVI) is a major route of metastatic dissemination and recent studies indicate its value as an independent prognostic indicator for advanced breast, colorectal, squamous cell, prostate, brain cancers. LVI is a clinicopathological hallmark of inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), an understudied and most lethal breast cancer. IBC is often misdiagnosed due to an absence of a solid mass and its unique presentation of diffuse tumor cell clusters/emboli in the dermal lymphatics. Widely used mammary tumor implantation models coupled with bioluminescence or fluorescence imaging to monitor tumor growth kinetics are ineffective for evaluating spatial and temporal changes in growth and migration patterns of individual tumor cells and clusters within their microenvironmental context. The goal of this study was to develop a murine model to simulate the unique clinicopathological features of IBC patients and to assess both qualitatively and quantitatively local tumor growth, motility, and LVI. Methods: To specifically facilitate visualization of lymphatic and endothelial vessels along with tumor-vessel interactions, we generated a transgenic nude mice model (ProxTom RFP Nu/Nu) wherein, the mice exhibit red, fluorescent lymphatics [tdTomato fluorophore under control of a Prox1 promoter, which encodes a transcription factor (prospero-related homeobox 1) necessary for the formation and maintenance of lymphatic vessels]. Next, we employed a surgical technique, wherein a window chamber is placed on the dorsal skinfold of mice, which allows for microscopic examination of implanted tumor cells and ability to track dynamic changes of the tumor in its local microenvironment from the time of implantation up to 10 days. Patient-derived IBC or PDX stably transfected to express green, red fluorescent and/or dual tagged with luciferase reporters were transplanted in mice bearing window chambers. Intravital fluorescence microscopy and IVIS imaging were used to serially quantify local tumor growth, motility, length density of lymph and blood vessels, and degree of tumor cell lymphatic invasion over 0-140h. Results: Multichannel optical imaging of the window chamber in the ProxTom RFP Nu/Nu mice demonstrated co-localization of IBC tumor cells and lymphatics. Diffuse tumor cells were observed along regions of lymphatic vessels both proximal and distal to the primary tumor site. However, measurement of blood and lymph vessel density showed no significant change over time. Next, these datasets were used for quantitative analysis by setting the tumor cell channel (GFP) at a threshold to count any clusters greater than 50 pixels2 (~0.0013mm2) and with greater than the mean + 2 standard deviations of the background signal while avoiding noise/artifacts from very small regions (<~0.001mm2). This allowed for computation of the total tumor area including average area of each cluster. In addition, the area moment, which describes the basic directional growth pattern of the tumor cells, was quantified by multiplying a cluster distance from the center of mass by its area. Conclusions: A key novel finding from structured illumination imaging data was the observation of LVI occurring early, similar with the clinical presentation in IBC patients. This model was able to effectively track tumor cluster migration. This approach of short-term longitudinal imaging time frame in studying transient or dynamic events of diffuse, collectively migrating tumor cells in the local environment and quantitative analysis of the tumor area, motility and vessel characteristics is an innovation that can be used to investigate other cancer cell types exhibiting LVI. Funding in part by DoD W81XWH-17-1-0297; W81XWH201053 (GRD); ACS Mission Boost grant MBG-20-141-01 (GRD) and NIH grant P30-CA014236 (Imaging Core/GMP) Citation Format: Gayathri R Devi, Dorababu Sannareddy, Alexandra Bennion, Ashlyn Rickard, Douglas C Rouse, Mark W Dewhirst, Gregory M Palmer. Monitoring Lymphovascular Invasion and Tumor Growth of Inflammatory Breast Cancer in a Murine Lymphatic Reporter Window Chamber Model [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2022 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2022 Dec 6-10; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(5 Suppl):Abstract nr P3-08-06.

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