Abstract

BackgroundWe investigated whether head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) reaffirm patient responses to anti-cancer therapeutics.MethodsTumors from HNSCC patients were transplanted into immunodeficient mice and propagated via subsequent implantation. We evaluated established PDXs by histology, genomic profiling, and in vivo anti-cancer efficacy testing to confirm them as the authentic in vivo platform.ResultsFrom 62 HNSCCs, 15 (24%) PDXs were established. The primary cancer types were tongue (8), oropharynx (3), hypopharynx (1), ethmoid sinus cancer (1), supraglottic cancer (1), and parotid gland (1); six PDXs (40%) were established from biopsy specimens from advanced HNSCC. PDXs mostly retained donor characteristics and remained stable across passages. PIK3CA (H1047R), HRAS (G12D), and TP53 mutations (H193R, I195T, R248W, R273H, E298X) and EGFR, CCND1, MYC, and PIK3CA amplifications were identified. Using the acquisition method, biopsy showed a significantly higher engraftment rate when compared with that of surgical resection (100% [6/6] vs. 16.1% [9/56], P < 0.001). Specimens obtained from metastatic sites showed a significantly higher engraftment rate than did those from primary sites (100% [9/9] vs. 11.3% [6/53], P < 0.001). Three PDX models from HPV-positive tumors were established, as compared to 12 from HPV-negative (15.8% [3/19] and 27.9% [12/43] respectively, P = 0.311), suggesting that HPV positivity tends to show a low engraftment rate. Drug responses in PDX recapitulated the clinical responses of the matching patients with pan-HER inhibitors and pan-PI3K inhibitor.ConclusionsGenetically and clinically annotated HNSCC PDXs could be useful preclinical tools for evaluating biomarkers, therapeutic targets, and new drug discovery.

Highlights

  • We investigated whether head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) reaffirm patient responses to anti-cancer therapeutics

  • Increasing attention has been engrossed on the development and characterization of patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX) [1]

  • We aim to evaluate the clinical factors affecting the establishment of HNSCC PDX models and whether established PDX models can reflect actual patients

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Summary

Introduction

We investigated whether head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) reaffirm patient responses to anti-cancer therapeutics. Preclinical studies presented favorable responses to numerous novel anticancer agents, actual clinical trials in patients have not been as successful, with only 5% of novel anti-cancer agents showing efficacy. These disappointing results emphasize the necessity for novel therapeutic strategies to improve prediction of efficacy on the preclinical stage [3, 4]. PDX models are established by direct engraftment of the patient’s tumor into immunodeficient mice. PDXs are in vivo models to test clinically guided hypotheses, capable of evaluating drug activity and novel drug combined strategies, and to elucidate their predictive biomarkers [7, 8]

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