Clinical relevance and therapeutic predictive ability of hypoxia biomarkers in head and neck cancer tumour models

Author:

Lee Tet Woo12,Singleton Dean C.123,Harms Julia K.1,Lu Man1,McManaway Sarah P.1,Lai Amy14,Tercel Moana12,Pruijn Frederik B.12,Macann Andrew M. J.5,Hunter Francis W.126,Wilson William R.12,Jamieson Stephen M. F.124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Auckland Cancer Society Research Centre University of Auckland New Zealand

2. Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery University of Auckland New Zealand

3. Department of Molecular Medicine and Pathology University of Auckland New Zealand

4. Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology University of Auckland New Zealand

5. Department of Radiation Oncology Auckland City Hospital New Zealand

6. Oncology Therapeutic Area Janssen Research and Development Spring House PA USA

Abstract

Tumour hypoxia promotes poor patient outcomes, with particularly strong evidence for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). To effectively target hypoxia, therapies require selection biomarkers and preclinical models that can accurately model tumour hypoxia. We established 20 patient‐derived xenograft (PDX) and cell line‐derived xenograft (CDX) models of HNSCC that we characterised for their fidelity to represent clinical HNSCC in gene expression, hypoxia status and proliferation and that were evaluated for their sensitivity to hypoxia‐activated prodrugs (HAPs). PDX models showed greater fidelity in gene expression to clinical HNSCC than cell lines, as did CDX models relative to their paired cell lines. PDX models were significantly more hypoxic than CDX models, as assessed by hypoxia gene signatures and pimonidazole immunohistochemistry, and showed similar hypoxia gene expression to clinical HNSCC tumours. Hypoxia or proliferation status alone could not determine HAP sensitivity across our 20 HNSCC and two non‐HNSCC tumour models by either tumour growth inhibition or killing of hypoxia cells in an ex vivo clonogenic assay. In summary, our tumour models provide clinically relevant HNSCC models that are suitable for evaluating hypoxia‐targeting therapies; however, additional biomarkers to hypoxia are required to accurately predict drug sensitivity.

Funder

Health Research Council of New Zealand

Publisher

Wiley

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