Personalized Vascularized Models of Breast Cancer Desmoplasia Reveal Biomechanical Determinants of Drug Delivery to the Tumor

Author:

Offeddu Giovanni S.1,Cambria Elena1ORCID,Shelton Sarah E.1,Haase Kristina2,Wan Zhengpeng1,Possenti Luca34,Nguyen Huu Tuan1,Gillrie Mark R.5,Hickman Dean6,Knutson Charles G.6,Kamm Roger D.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

2. European Molecular Biology Laboratory European Molecular Biology Laboratory Barcelona Barcelona 08003 Spain

3. LaBS Department of Chemistry Materials and Chemical Engineering Politecnico di Milano Milan 20133 Italy

4. Data Science Unit Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori Milan 20133 Italy

5. Department of Medicine Snyder Institute for Chronic Diseases University of Calgary Calgary Alberta T2N 2T9 Canada

6. Amgen Research Amgen Inc. 360 Binney Street Cambridge MA 02142 USA

Abstract

AbstractDesmoplasia in breast cancer leads to heterogeneity in physical properties of the tissue, resulting in disparities in drug delivery and treatment efficacy among patients, thus contributing to high disease mortality. Personalized in vitro breast cancer models hold great promise for high‐throughput testing of therapeutic strategies to normalize the aberrant microenvironment in a patient‐specific manner. Here, tumoroids assembled from breast cancer cell lines (MCF7, SKBR3, and MDA‐MB‐468) and patient‐derived breast tumor cells (TCs) cultured in microphysiological systems including perfusable microvasculature reproduce key aspects of stromal and vascular dysfunction causing impaired drug delivery. Models containing SKBR3 and MDA‐MB‐468 tumoroids show higher stromal hyaluronic acid (HA) deposition, vascular permeability, interstitial fluid pressure (IFP), and degradation of vascular HA relative to models containing MCF7 tumoroids or models without tumoroids. Interleukin 8 (IL8) secretion is found responsible for vascular dysfunction and loss of vascular HA. Interventions targeting IL8 or stromal HA normalize vascular permeability, perfusion, and IFP, and ultimately enhance drug delivery and TC death in response to perfusion with trastuzumab and cetuximab. Similar responses are observed in patient‐derived models. These microphysiological systems can thus be personalized by using patient‐derived cells and can be applied to discover new molecular therapies for the normalization of the tumor microenvironment.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

National Cancer Institute

Fondazione AIRC per la ricerca sul cancro ETS

American-Italian Cancer Foundation

Amgen

Publisher

Wiley

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