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Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Schmidt, DR; Gramatikov, IMT; Sheen, A; Williams, CL; Hurwitz, M; Dodge, LE; Holupka, E; Kiger, WS; Cornwall-Brady, MR; Huang, W; Mak, HH ...
Published in: Commun Med (Lond)
August 9, 2023

BACKGROUND: Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) of cancer are powerful tools to study mechanisms of disease progression and therapy response, yet little is known about how these models respond to multimodality therapy used in patients. Radiation therapy (RT) is frequently used to treat localized cancers with curative intent, delay progression of oligometastases, and palliate symptoms of metastatic disease. METHODS: Here we report the development, testing, and validation of a platform to immobilize and target tumors in mice with stereotactic ablative RT (SART). Xenograft and autochthonous tumor models were treated with hypofractionated ablative doses of radiotherapy. RESULTS: We demonstrate that hypofractionated regimens used in clinical practice can be effectively delivered in mouse models. SART alters tumor stroma and the immune environment, improves survival in GEMMs of primary prostate and colorectal cancer, and synergizes with androgen deprivation in prostate cancer. Complete pathologic responses were achieved in xenograft models, but not in GEMMs. CONCLUSIONS: While SART is capable of fully ablating xenografts, it is unable to completely eradicate disease in GEMMs, arguing that resistance to potentially curative therapy can be modeled in GEMMs.

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Published In

Commun Med (Lond)

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

August 9, 2023

Volume

3

Issue

1

Start / End Page

108

Location

England
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Schmidt, D. R., Gramatikov, I. M. T., Sheen, A., Williams, C. L., Hurwitz, M., Dodge, L. E., … Vander Heiden, M. G. (2023). Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer. Commun Med (Lond), 3(1), 108. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00336-3
Schmidt, Daniel R., Iva Monique T. Gramatikov, Allison Sheen, Christopher L. Williams, Martina Hurwitz, Laura E. Dodge, Edward Holupka, et al. “Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer.Commun Med (Lond) 3, no. 1 (August 9, 2023): 108. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00336-3.
Schmidt DR, Gramatikov IMT, Sheen A, Williams CL, Hurwitz M, Dodge LE, et al. Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer. Commun Med (Lond). 2023 Aug 9;3(1):108.
Schmidt, Daniel R., et al. “Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer.Commun Med (Lond), vol. 3, no. 1, Aug. 2023, p. 108. Pubmed, doi:10.1038/s43856-023-00336-3.
Schmidt DR, Gramatikov IMT, Sheen A, Williams CL, Hurwitz M, Dodge LE, Holupka E, Kiger WS, Cornwall-Brady MR, Huang W, Mak HH, Cormier KS, Condon C, Dane Wittrup K, Yilmaz ÖH, Stevenson MA, Down JD, Floyd SR, Roper J, Vander Heiden MG. Ablative radiotherapy improves survival but does not cure autochthonous mouse models of prostate and colorectal cancer. Commun Med (Lond). 2023 Aug 9;3(1):108.

Published In

Commun Med (Lond)

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

August 9, 2023

Volume

3

Issue

1

Start / End Page

108

Location

England