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Experimental Treatment of Mucinous Peritoneal Metastases Using Patient-Derived Xenograft Models

Abstract

Mucinous peritoneal metastases (PM) generally respond poorly to systemic treatment, and there is a clear unmet need for new treatment strategies to improve survival and quality of life for patients with PM. In this work, the growth inhibitory effect of five drugs (oxaliplatin (OXA; 5 mg/kg), irinotecan (IRI; 60 mg/kg), cabazitaxel (CBZ; 15 or 30 mg/kg), regorafenib (REG; 10, 30 or 60 mg/kg), and capecitabine (CAP; 359 or 755 mg/kg) was investigated in three orthotopic patient-derived xenograft models that mimic mucinous PM.

Drugs were administered intraperitoneally (i.p.) as monotherapy weekly for 4 weeks (OXA, IRI), as one single i.p. injection (CBZ), or orally (REG, CAP) daily 5 of 7 days per week for four weeks, and i.p. tumor growth and survival were monitored and compared between treatment groups. The i.p. administered drugs (OXA, IRI, CBZ) had the strongest growth inhibitory effect, with OXA being most efficacious, completely inhibiting tumor growth in the majority of the animals. CBZ and IRI also strongly inhibited tumor growth, but with more variation in efficacy between the models. A moderate reduction in tumor growth was observed in all models treated with REG, while CAP had little to no growth inhibitory effect. Targeted next-generation-sequencing has identified mutational profiles typically associated with PM (mutations in KRAS, GNAS, and BRAF oncogenes), supporting the representativeness of the models. The results presented in this work support the continued exploration of i.p. treatment protocols for PM, with OXA remaining and CBZ emerging as particularly interesting candidates for further studies.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Karianne Giller Fleten
  • Christin Lund-Andersen
  • Stein Waagene
  • Torveig Weum Abrahamsen
  • Ýrr Asbjørg Mørch
  • Kjetil Boye Pedersen
  • Annette Torgunrud Kristensen
  • Kjersti Flatmark

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Biotechnology and Nanomedicine
  • University of Oslo
  • Oslo University Hospital

Year

2020

Published in

Translational Oncology

ISSN

1944-7124

Volume

13

Issue

8

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository