Abstract
The subrenal capsule assay (SRCA) was used to study the sensitivity of breast cancer to cytostatic drug combinations. The results were compared with steroid receptor status. Forty-five of 46 SRCAs (98%) were macroscopically evaluable. However, a histological study implied that the transplants should also be evaluated histologically, because in only 14 21 (67%) of the control SRCAs examined were histologically viable tumor cells seen. An inflammatory cell reaction was noticed in half of the cases. In the groups treated with cytostatics only 3 21 (14%) had vital tumor cells, whereas inflammation was evident in 4 21 (19%) of the cases. The rate of resistance to A + CTX was 30%. By testing several drug combinations against each tumor the rate of chemoresistance was reduced to 10%. The differences between A + CTX and the best combination were statistically significant ( P < 0.05). Of the tumors 79% were ER-positive and 67% PR-positive. Receptor-negative tumors tended to be more sensitive to cytostatics than receptor-positive tumors (100 vs 85%). The difference was not, however, statistically significant. It can be concluded that the SRCA under standardized conditions is a good method for studying the response of individual breast cancers to chemotherapy.
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