Inflammation drives tumor growth in an immunocompetent implantable metastasis model.
Res Sq
; 2024 Aug 11.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39149496
ABSTRACT
Nearly 90% of cancer deaths are due to metastasis. Conventional cancer therapeutics including chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy, are effective in treating primary tumors, but may aggravate disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) into regaining a proliferative state. Models isolating the post dissemination environment are needed to address the potential risks of these therapies, however modeling post dissemination environments is challenging. Often, host organisms become moribund due to primary tumor mass before native metastatic niches can evolve. Implantable tissue engineered niches have been used to attract circulating tumor cells independent of the primary tumor. Here, we serially transplant such tissue engineered niches with recruited DTCs in order to isolate the post dissemination environment. After transplantaion, 69% of scaffolds developed overt post-dissemination cancer growth, however 100% of scaffolds did not grow to a life-threatening critical size within twelve weeks. Adjuvant chemotherapy, while initially effective, did not prevent long-term DTC growth in scaffolds. Subjecting these transplanted niches to surgical resection via biopsy punch enhanced CD31, MMP9, Ly6G, and tumor burden compared to control scaffolds. Biopsy punching was able to rescue tumor incidence from prior chemotherapy. This model of serial transplantation of engineered DTC niches is a highly controllable and flexible method of establishing and systematically investigating the post-dissemination niche.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
Res Sq
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
United States