Abstract

Urological malignancies, including prostate and bladder carcinoma, represent a major clinical problem due to the frequent occurrence of therapy resistance and the formation of incurable distant metastases. As a result, there is an urgent need for versatile and predictive disease models for the assessment of the individualized drug response in urological malignancies. Compound testing on ex vivo cultured patient-derived tumor tissues could represent a promising approach. In this study, we have optimized an ex vivo culture system of explanted human prostate and bladder tumors derived from clinical specimens and human cancer cell lines xenografted in mice. The explanted and cultured tumor slices remained viable and tissue architecture could be maintained for up to 10 days of culture. Treatment of ex vivo cultured human prostate and bladder cancer tissues with docetaxel and gemcitabine, respectively, resulted in a dose-dependent anti-tumor response. The dose-dependent decrease in tumor cells upon administration of the chemotherapeutic agents was preceded by an induction of apoptosis. The implementation and optimization of the tissue slice technology may facilitate the assessment of anti-tumor efficacies of existing and candidate pharmacological agents in the complex multicellular neoplastic tissues from prostate and bladder cancer patients. Our model represents a versatile “near-patient” tool to determine tumor-targeted and/or stroma-mediated anti-neoplastic responses, thus contributing to the field of personalized therapeutics.

Highlights

  • Urological cancers, including prostate and bladder cancer, represent a major global clinical problem

  • Culturing beyond 4 days resulted in gradual deterioration of tissue architecture (Figure 2C). These results indicate that our methodological adjustments allow compound testing in ex vivo cultures of explanted human prostate and bladder cancer tissue slices

  • Various preclinical models are currently applied in the oncological research field ranging from in vitro cell culture to patient-derived xenografting (PDX) [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Urological cancers, including prostate and bladder cancer, represent a major global clinical problem. The development of distant metastases and therapy resistance represent major clinical challenges in both carcinomas. Upon dissemination to distant organs, the 5-year survival of patients suffering from prostate and Frontiers in Oncology | www.frontiersin.org van de Merbel et al. Ex vivo Cultures Urological Malignancies bladder cancer decreases dramatically [3]. The current standard of care for advanced prostate and bladder cancer includes the use of chemotherapeutic agents, such as docetaxel and gemcitabine. Previous studies have indicated that the response to chemotherapy in these patients is heterogeneous. A significant subset of the patients does not respond to chemotherapy or will develop resistance to this treatment [7, 9]. Novel means of predicting individual therapy responses are, urgently required

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