Abstract

It has been hypothesized that continuously releasing drug molecules into the tumor over an extended period of time may significantly improve the chemotherapeutic efficacy by overcoming physical transport limitations of conventional bolus drug treatment. In this paper, we present a generalized space- and time-dependent mathematical model of drug transport and drug-cell interactions to quantitatively formulate this hypothesis. Model parameters describe: perfusion and tissue architecture (blood volume fraction and blood vessel radius); diffusion penetration distance of drug (i.e., a function of tissue compactness and drug uptake rates by tumor cells); and cell death rates (as function of history of drug uptake). We performed preliminary testing and validation of the mathematical model using in vivo experiments with different drug delivery methods on a breast cancer mouse model. Experimental data demonstrated a 3-fold increase in response using nano-vectored drug vs. free drug delivery, in excellent quantitative agreement with the model predictions. Our model results implicate that therapeutically targeting blood volume fraction, e.g., through vascular normalization, would achieve a better outcome due to enhanced drug delivery.Author SummaryCancer treatment efficacy can be significantly enhanced through the elution of drug from nano-carriers that can temporarily stay in the tumor vasculature. Here we present a relatively simple yet powerful mathematical model that accounts for both spatial and temporal heterogeneities of drug dosing to help explain, examine, and prove this concept. We find that the delivery of systemic chemotherapy through a certain form of nano-carriers would have enhanced tumor kill by a factor of 2 to 4 over the standard therapy that the patients actually received. We also find that targeting blood volume fraction (a parameter of the model) through vascular normalization can achieve more effective drug delivery and tumor kill. More importantly, this model only requires a limited number of parameters which can all be readily assessed from standard clinical diagnostic measurements (e.g., histopathology and CT). This addresses an important challenge in current translational research and justifies further development of the model towards clinical translation.

Highlights

  • The biological drivers of cancer promote a physical microenvironment that differs significantly from normal tissues [1]

  • We find that targeting blood volume fraction through vascular normalization can achieve more effective drug delivery and tumor kill

  • We have studied how mathematical modeling of the mass transport of drugs can mechanistically describe the therapeutic response to chemotherapy [19,20,21,22] and enable an understanding of the drug delivery process in humans [23]

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Summary

Introduction

The biological drivers of cancer promote a physical microenvironment that differs significantly from normal tissues [1]. The underpinnings of the dysregulated physical properties of cancer are an active area of investigation Research efforts in this area are highlighted by modern oncologic concepts of how the physical microenvironment influences tumor behavior (i.e., theories such as Transport Oncophysics and vascular normalization) [2, 3], and are supported by experimental data in animal cancer models and cancer patients [4, 5]. We have studied how mathematical modeling of the mass transport of drugs can mechanistically describe the therapeutic response to chemotherapy [19,20,21,22] and enable an understanding of the drug delivery process in humans [23] To date, these efforts have been limited by the inability to account for spatial and temporal heterogeneity in drug dosing and tumor characteristics

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