Abstract

Choroid plexus carcinoma is a rare infantile brain tumor with an aggressive clinical course.1 There is no optimal treatment and survival is poor. Gross total surgical removal is the single most important predictor of survival.1 Gross total surgical removal rates are inconsistent and associated with significant morbidity owing to the hemorrhagic nature of these tumors compounded by a small circulating blood volume. Neoadjuvant systemic chemotherapy with “second look surgery” helps to achieve gross total surgical removal2 but has an inefficient pharmacokinetic profile and exposes children to dose- limiting toxic side effects. Hence, there is a strong need to identify and develop new agents and strategies to improve current choroid plexus carcinoma (CPC) treatment. Here, we report a high-throughput drug screening using a CPC cancer tissue-originated from a 7-year-old male patient and procured (Children’s Cancer Hospital Egypt) to identify new potent drugs. The selected candidates have been used as single agent and combination agent chemotherapy to propose a relevant study (e.g pharmacokinetics, toxicity, biodistribution, anticancer efficacy) for improving CPC treatment using a pre-existing intraarterial chemotherapy. A genetically engineered model has been developed by Shannon et al by breeding RosamTmG with Nestin-Cre to generate Nestin-cre/Rosa mTmG reporter mice overexpressing c-Myc, which provides a fully penetrant model of CPC in the lateral ventricle CP and 4th ventricle CP.3 This mice model will be used to explore in vivo the newly discovered drug combinations to treat the CPC tumor. 1. Hosmann, A. et al. Management of choroid plexus tumors—an institutional experience. Acta Neurochir. (Wien). 161, 745–754 (2019) 2. Schneider, C. et al. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy reduces blood loss during the resection of pediatric choroid plexus carcinomas *christian. J. Neurosurg. Pediatr. Pediatr. 16, 126–133 (2015) 3. Shannon, M. L. et al. Mice Expressing Myc in Neural Precursors Develop Choroid Plexus and Ciliary Body Tumors. Am. J. Pathol. 188, 1334–1344 (2018)

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