Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) have emerged as an important platform to elucidate new treatments and biomarkers in oncology. PDX models are used to address clinically relevant questions, including the contribution of tumour heterogeneity to therapeutic responsiveness, the patterns of cancer evolutionary dynamics during tumour progression and under drug pressure, and the mechanisms of resistance to treatment. The ability of PDX models to predict clinical outcomes is being improved through mouse humanization strategies and the implementation of co-clinical trials, within which patients and PDXs reciprocally inform therapeutic decisions. This Opinion article discusses aspects of PDX modelling that are relevant to these questions and highlights the merits of shared PDX resources to advance cancer medicine from the perspective of EurOPDX, an international initiative devoted to PDX-based research.

Interrogating open issues in cancer precision medicine with patient-derived xenografts / A.T. Byrne, D.G. Alfã©rez, F. Amant, D. Annibali, J. Arribas, A.V. Biankin, A. Bruna, E. Budinskã¡, C. Caldas, D.K. Chang, R.B. Clarke, H. Clevers, G. Coukos, V. Dangles Marie, S. Gail Eckhardt, E. Gonzalez Suarez, E. Hermans, M. Hidalgo, M.A. Jarzabek, S. De Jong, J. Jonkers, K. Kemper, L. Lanfrancone, G.M. Mã¦landsmo, E. Marangoni, J. Marine, E. Medico, J.H. Norum, H.G. Palmer, D.S. Peeper, P.G. Pelicci, A. Piris Gimenez, S. Roman Roman, O.M. Rueda, J. Seoane, V. Serra, L. Soucek, D. Vanhecke, A. Villanueva, E. Vinolo, A. Bertotti, L. Trusolino. - In: NATURE REVIEWS CANCER. - ISSN 1474-175X. - 17:4(2017 Apr), pp. 254-268. [10.1038/nrc.2016.140]

Interrogating open issues in cancer precision medicine with patient-derived xenografts

P.G. Pelicci;
2017

Abstract

Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) have emerged as an important platform to elucidate new treatments and biomarkers in oncology. PDX models are used to address clinically relevant questions, including the contribution of tumour heterogeneity to therapeutic responsiveness, the patterns of cancer evolutionary dynamics during tumour progression and under drug pressure, and the mechanisms of resistance to treatment. The ability of PDX models to predict clinical outcomes is being improved through mouse humanization strategies and the implementation of co-clinical trials, within which patients and PDXs reciprocally inform therapeutic decisions. This Opinion article discusses aspects of PDX modelling that are relevant to these questions and highlights the merits of shared PDX resources to advance cancer medicine from the perspective of EurOPDX, an international initiative devoted to PDX-based research.
animals; biomarkers, tumor; clinical trials as topic; disease models, animal; drug resistance, neoplasm; humans; immunotherapy; mice; neoplasm metastasis; neoplasms; neoplastic stem cells; precision medicine; xenograft model antitumor assays; oncology; cancer research
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
apr-2017
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/520200
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