AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the challenge of drug resistance in cancer treatment, focusing on how the tumor microenvironment, especially macrophages, contributes to this problem, particularly in gliomas.
  • Researchers created a model to analyze how glioma cells interact with macrophages under the influence of CSF1R inhibitors, revealing insights into tumor regrowth and treatment response dynamics.
  • Findings suggest that drug resistance varies with dose and emphasize the potential for combining CSF1R and IGF1R inhibitors to enhance therapy effectiveness, providing a framework for optimizing cancer treatments.

Article Abstract

The emergence of drug resistance is often an inevitable obstacle that limits the long-term effectiveness of clinical cancer chemotherapeutics. Although various forms of cancer cell-intrinsic mechanisms of drug resistance have been experimentally revealed, the role and the underlying mechanism of tumor microenvironment in driving the development of acquired drug resistance remain elusive, which significantly impedes effective clinical cancer treatment. Recent experimental studies have revealed a macrophage-mediated drug resistance mechanism in which the tumor microenvironment undergoes adaptation in response to macrophage-targeted colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF1R) inhibition therapy in gliomas. In this study, we developed a spatio-temporal model to quantitatively describe the interplay between glioma cells and CSF1R inhibitor-targeted macrophages through CSF1 and IGF1 pathways. Our model was used to investigate the evolutionary kinetics of the tumor regrowth and the associated dynamic adaptation of the tumor microenvironment in response to the CSF1R inhibitor treatment. The simulation result obtained using this model was in agreement with the experimental data. The sensitivity analysis revealed the key parameters involved in the model, and their potential impacts on the model behavior were examined. Moreover, we demonstrated that the drug resistance is dose-dependent. In addition, we quantitatively evaluated the effects of combined CSFR inhibition and IGF1 receptor (IGF1R) inhibition with the goal of designing more effective therapies for gliomas. Our study provides quantitative and mechanistic insights into the microenvironmental adaptation mechanisms that operate during macrophage-targeted immunotherapy and has implications for drug dose optimization and the design of more effective combination therapies. .

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-0634DOI Listing

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