Abstract

Secondary lymphedema (SL)is a frequent and devastating complication of modern oncological therapy and filarial infections. A lack of a reliable preclinical model to investigate the underlying mechanism of clinical stage progression has limited the development of new therapeutic strategies. Current first line treatment has shown to be merely symptomatic and relies on lifetime use of compression garments and decongestive physiotherapy. In this study, we present the development of a secondary lymphedema model in 35 rats using pre- and intraoperative fluorescence-guided mapping of the lymphatics and microsurgical induction. In contrast to the few models reported so far, we decided to avoid the use of radiation for lymphedema induction. It turned out, that the model is nearly free of complications and capable of generating a statistically significant limb volume increase by water displacement measurements, sustained for at least 48 days. A translational, accurate lymphatic dysfunction was visualized by a novel VIS-NIR X-ray ICG-Clearance-Capacity imaging technology. For the first-time SL stage progression was validated by characteristic histological alterations, such as subdermal mast cell infiltration, adipose tissue deposition, and fibrosis by increased skin collagen content. Immunofluorescence confocal microscopy analysis suggested that stage progression is related to the presence of a characteristic α SMA+/HSP-47+/vimentin+ fibroblast subpopulation phenotype. These findings demonstrate that the in-vivo model is a reliable and clinically relevant SL model for the development of further secondary lymphedema therapeutic strategies and the analysis of the veiled molecular mechanisms of lymphatic dysfunction.

Highlights

  • Secondary lymphedema (SL) is a significant complication after oncological therapy and filarial infections

  • near-infrared camera (NIRC) was fixed at 20 cm above the operating site, and the whole intervention was visualized under real-time navigation of the lymphatic structures (Fig 1C–1G)

  • In only five out of the 34 rats (14.7%), a self-biting behavior into the wound edges, was observed despite proper analgesia. This complication was attributed to sutures itching or dermatitis related to the occlusive wound spray

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Summary

Introduction

Secondary lymphedema (SL) is a significant complication after oncological therapy and filarial infections. It is associated with disfiguring appearance and psychological morbidity [1]. Breast cancer is the most frequent female cancer and the main cause of SL [5]. As a late complication of breast cancer therapy, 5–70% of the patients suffer from SL depending on the extent of surgical lymph basin dissection and adjuvant oncological therapy [6]. SL occurs commonly as a surgical complication in skin (28%), gynecological (20%), and urological (10%) cancers [7,8,9]

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