AI Article Synopsis

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is resistant to chemotherapy, and better preclinical models are needed to develop effective treatments.
  • Current models mainly use subcutaneous human tumors in immunodeficient mice, which don't accurately simulate liver disease or metastasis, prompting the development of an orthotopic model where HCC cells are implanted in the liver of SCID mice.
  • The study evaluated various treatments, finding that while sorafenib reduced tumor growth, it caused significant weight loss; however, combining metronomic chemotherapy, especially UFT + CTX with an antiangiogenic agent like DC101, greatly improved overall survival in the mice.

Article Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an intrinsically chemotherapy refractory malignancy. Development of effective therapeutic regimens would be facilitated by improved preclinical HCC models. Currently, most models consist of subcutaneous human tumor transplants in immunodeficient mice; however, these do not reproduce the extensive liver disease associated with HCC or metastasize. To address this deficiency, we developed an orthotopic model. Human HCC cells were transfected with the gene encoding secretable beta-subunit human choriogonadotropin (beta-hCG), which was used as a surrogate marker of tumor burden. The HCC cells were implanted into the left liver lobe of severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice, after which the efficacy of different therapies was evaluated on established, but liver-confined human Hep3B cell line HCC. Treatments included sorafenib or metronomic chemotherapy using cyclophosphamide (CTX), UFT, an oral 5-fluorouracil prodrug, or doxorubicin either alone or in various combinations, with or without an antiangiogenic agent, DC101, an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 antibody. Sorafenib inhibited tumor growth in a dose-dependent manner but caused severe weight loss in SCID mice, thus necessitating use of DC101 in subsequent experiments. Although less toxicity was observed using either single or doublet metronomic chemotherapy without any added antiangiogenic agent, none, provided survival benefit. In contrast, significantly improved overall survival was observed using various combinations of metronomic chemotherapy regimens such as UFT + CTX with DC101. In conclusion, using this model of liver-confined but advanced HCC suggests that the efficacy of a targeted antiangiogenic drug or metronomic chemotherapy can be mutually enhanced by concurrent combination treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2838774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1593/neo.91872DOI Listing

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