Abstract

BackgroundOsteosarcoma (OS) is the most common pediatric primary malignant bone tumor. As the prognosis for patients following standard treatment did not improve for almost three decades, functional preclinical models that closely reflect important clinical cancer characteristics are urgently needed to develop and evaluate new treatment strategies. The objective of this study was to establish an orthotopic xenotransplanted mouse model using patient-derived tumor tissue.MethodsFresh tumor tissue from an adolescent female patient with osteosarcoma after relapse was surgically xenografted into the right tibia of 6 immunodeficient BALB/c Nu/Nu mice as well as cultured into medium. Tumor growth was serially assessed by palpation and with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In parallel, a primary cell line of the same tumor was established. Histology and high-resolution array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) were used to investigate both phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of different passages of human xenografts and the cell line compared to the tissue of origin.ResultsA primary OS cell line and a primary patient-derived orthotopic xenotranplanted mouse model were established. MRI analyses and histopathology demonstrated an identical architecture in the primary tumor and in the xenografts. Array-CGH analyses of the cell line and all xenografts showed highly comparable patterns of genomic progression. So far, three further primary patient-derived orthotopic xenotranplanted mouse models could be established.ConclusionWe report the first orthotopic OS mouse model generated by transplantation of tumor fragments directly harvested from the patient. This model represents the morphologic and genomic identity of the primary tumor and provides a preclinical platform to evaluate new treatment strategies in OS.

Highlights

  • Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common pediatric primary malignant bone tumor

  • Establishment of a primary osteosarcoma orthotopic mouse xenograft Human OS tissue was collected from a 17 years old girl with an OS relapse in the right tibia with pulmonary and mediastinal metastases

  • Primary disease had been diagnosed two years previously with localized disease in the right distal femur. She received neo-adjuvant chemotherapy according to the EURAMOS 1 protocol [17]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common pediatric primary malignant bone tumor. As the prognosis for patients following standard treatment did not improve for almost three decades, functional preclinical models that closely reflect important clinical cancer characteristics are urgently needed to develop and evaluate new treatment strategies. For the development of novel treatment strategies, human tumor xenografts are currently the most widely used models in a preclinical setting. They most resemble the human tumor despite the restrictions due to the immunodeficiency of the host organism. Engineered mouse models (GEM) allow the study of Blattmann et al Journal of Translational Medicine (2015) 13:136 effects of inhibitors against defined molecular targets. With these increasingly sophisticated models tissue specific molecular changes can be compared between individual cancers and tissues on the molecular level. As mechanisms of transformation and oncogenesis differ between “mice and men” the generation of clinically relevant models using the mouse requires their humanization [3]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call