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Old 09-20-2013, 07:20 AM   #1
Lani
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4,778
Lightbulb testing treatments against your tumor implanted into an immunodeficient mouse

this should speed up research as to how tumors evolve under treatment, how to reverse/prevent drug resistance, and how best to treat a tumor in an individual patient (although for the last it may prove exceedingly expensive and time-consuming-hope the time and expense can be brought down with time, new technologies )

Public release date: 19-Sep-2013
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Contact: Mary Beth O'Leary
moleary@cell.com
617-397-2802
Cell Press
A genome-forward approach to tackling drug-resistant cancers

If you really want to understand why a particular human cancer resists treatment, you have to be able to study that tumor—really study it—in a way that just isn't possible in humans. Cancer biologists have been developing a new approach to this challenge, by transplanting human cancers directly from patients to mice whose crippled immune systems will allow those human tissues to grow. According to research published in the Cell Press publication Cell Reports on September 19th, this new approach permits analysis of human cancer in unprecedented detail. The new work shows that those transplanted cancers, known as PDX (for patient-derived xenografts), are very good genomic replicas of the original at every level of analysis.

Overall, the PDX approach promises to speed the development of new drugs along with doctors' ability to make more precise choices about how those drugs are used to treat patients, the researchers say.

"The development of precision pharmacology is clearly the current focus in PDX research," said Matthew Ellis of Washington University in St Louis. "Human testing is hugely expensive, and often the response rates for the patients on experimental drugs are low because the biology of each patient is not well defined. Panels of clinically and genomically annotated PDX can therefore be very valuable for studying drug action and developing predictive biomarkers. Extensive pre- and post-drug sampling can be conducted to study drug effects and drug resistance in a way that would be impossible in the clinical setting."

In the new study, Ellis and his team transplanted drug-resistant human breast cancers into mice and then made very detailed comparisons of those transplanted tumors versus the originals.

The researchers' deep whole-genome analyses showed a high degree of genomic fidelity. In other words, the complex human tumor tissues in the mice looked very much like those in the people they originally came from. While some new mutations did arise after transplantation, those genetic changes rarely had functional significance.

The researchers were surprised to discover that the original and PDX cancers were similar at the cellular level as well. Cancer cells carrying mutations that were relatively rare in the patient were also maintained at lower frequencies in the mice. Likewise, more dominant clones in the original tumor tended to stay dominant in the mice. This suggests that the frequency of genetically distinct tumor cells is in an equilibrium that survives transplantation into mice for reasons that aren't yet clear.

An analysis of multiple estrogen receptor-positive PDX from patients with endocrine therapy-resistant disease shows just how this approach can yield tumor-specific explanations for therapy resistance. Resistant tumors were associated with different kinds of alterations to the estrogen receptor gene ESR1, the researchers found, producing different responses to endocrine therapy.

"The prevalence of ESR1 mutations and gene arrangements in the luminal PDX was a deep surprise to me as I thought these events were rare," Ellis said. "There had been very sporadic reports of ESR1 point mutations in clinical samples over the years, but to find them at high prevalence in the PDX and therefore in a setting where the link to endocrine therapy resistance can be directly studied was, for me, a critical breakthrough in our understanding of this critical problem."

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Li et al.: "Endocrine Therapy-Resistant ESR1 Variants Revealed by Genomic Characterization of Breast Cancer Derived Xenografts"
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Old 10-14-2013, 03:06 PM   #2
helichrysum
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Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 4
Re: testing treatments against your tumor implanted into an immunodeficient mouse

Lani, I've just seen a list of your posts and they are impressive. Well done.
I have a specific question for you. I have been treated for early bc with TCH. Finished chemo Nov 2012 and Herceptin 3 months ago. I am still getting rashes. They come and go a bit and sometimes there is only one spot. I am not sure if this is a Herceptin hangover or something else I should be paying attention to.
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Old 10-14-2013, 11:44 PM   #3
Lani
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4,778
Re: testing treatments against your tumor implanted into an immunodeficient mouse

I am in no way qualified to give you an opinion, unfortunately (fortunately for you, though!)

Perhaps you should place two separate posts under the Tykerb/Herceptin board. One under the" Please list all side effects of herceptin real or imagined"
thread and the other as a new thread. If you get no answers, I would suggest coming back to the her2support board and starting a thread asking whether others have had skin rashes which persisted more than 4 months after stopping herceptin (and more than 10 months or more after TC treatment)

Is the rash in an area that was radiated? If so, the following might be helpful http://www.cmaj.ca/content/182/3/E150.full http://lungcancer.about.com/od/radia...ion-Recall.htm


Good luck with getting help...there are many here with lots of personal experience
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