Background: Metastatic lung disease to the central nervous system (CNS) comprises a significant percentage of cranial metastases. For those cases where chemotherapy may be of palliative or therapeutic benefit, in vitro chemoresponse testing may identify the agent(s) most likely to be effective clinically.
Methods: Tumor-derived cell cultures were established from 14 surgically excised lung lesions metastatic to the CNS.
Background: The biological efficacy of, and spectrum of action of, agents used in treatment of breast cancer are important issues in therapy planning.
Materials And Methods: Techniques used involve monolayer culture and a quantitative microtiter plate-based chemo-response assay. Precision Therapeutics' overall assessability rate is 90% for tumors of all types.
Isolation and growth of malignant cells from solid tumors have often met with disappointing results. Consequently, we have developed a cell culture methodology based on ex vivo explantation of tumor tissue, with subsequent monolayer cell outgrowth. In an attempt to assess methods for detection of malignant cells in these cultures, we analyzed and compared the results of cytopathology, growth in soft agar, and detection of telomerase activity with those of standard immunohistochemistry (IHC) techniques for the detection of cytokeratins, tumor marker p53, and proliferation marker Ki-67.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe the in vitro patterns of response of explanted primary and recurrent ovarian cancers to platinum- and taxane-based chemotherapeutics. The chemoresponse assay utilizes cells that grow out from tumor fragments and are then challenged with varied concentrations of chemotherapeutic agents, coupled with a highly quantitative cell counting analysis system. The in vitro response rates for 268 primary cancer explants were 24% and 54% for carboplatin and cisplatin, respectively, and 31% and 25% for docetaxel and paclitaxel, respectively.
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