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Assessment of MRI to estimate metastatic dissemination risk and prometastatic effects of chemotherapy. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Metastatic breast cancer spreads through specialized sites known as tumor microenvironment of metastasis (TMEM) doorways, which involve specific cell interactions that increase the risk of distant metastasis.
  • A new MRI technique, TMEM Activity-MRI, effectively detects these TMEM-associated vascular openings and correlates well with TMEM doorway counts in breast cancer patients and mouse models.
  • TMEM Activity-MRI shows potential as a non-invasive tool for assessing metastatic risk and monitoring treatment responses in localized breast cancer cases.

Article Abstract

Metastatic dissemination in breast cancer is regulated by specialized intravasation sites called "tumor microenvironment of metastasis" (TMEM) doorways, composed of a tumor cell expressing the actin-regulatory protein Mena, a perivascular macrophage, and an endothelial cell, all in stable physical contact. High TMEM doorway number is associated with an increased risk of distant metastasis in human breast cancer and mouse models of breast carcinoma. Here, we developed a novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methodology, called TMEM Activity-MRI, to detect TMEM-associated vascular openings that serve as the portal of entry for cancer cell intravasation and metastatic dissemination. We demonstrate that TMEM Activity-MRI correlates with primary tumor TMEM doorway counts in both breast cancer patients and mouse models, including MMTV-PyMT and patient-derived xenograft models. In addition, TMEM Activity-MRI is reduced in mouse models upon treatment with rebastinib, a specific and potent TMEM doorway inhibitor. TMEM Activity-MRI is an assay that specifically measures TMEM-associated vascular opening (TAVO) events in the tumor microenvironment, and as such, can be utilized in mechanistic studies investigating molecular pathways of cancer cell dissemination and metastasis. Finally, we demonstrate that TMEM Activity-MRI increases upon treatment with paclitaxel in mouse models, consistent with prior observations that chemotherapy enhances TMEM doorway assembly and activity in human breast cancer. Our findings suggest that TMEM Activity-MRI is a promising precision medicine tool for localized breast cancer that could be used as a non-invasive test to determine metastatic risk and serve as an intermediate pharmacodynamic biomarker to monitor therapeutic response to agents that block TMEM doorway-mediated dissemination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9440218PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41523-022-00463-5DOI Listing

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