Establishing and characterizing patient-derived xenografts using pre-chemotherapy percutaneous biopsy and post-chemotherapy surgical samples from a prospective neoadjuvant breast cancer study

Author:

Yu Jia,Qin Bo,Moyer Ann M.,Sinnwell Jason P.,Thompson Kevin J.,Copland John A.,Marlow Laura A.,Miller James L.,Yin Ping,Gao Bowen,Minter-Dykhouse Katherine,Tang Xiaojia,McLaughlin Sarah A.,Moreno-Aspitia Alvaro,Schweitzer Anthony,Lu Yan,Hubbard Jason,Northfelt Donald W.,Gray Richard J.,Hunt Katie,Conners Amy L.,Suman Vera J.,Kalari Krishna R.,Ingle James N.,Lou Zhenkun,Visscher Daniel W.,Weinshilboum Richard,Boughey Judy C.,Goetz Matthew P.,Wang Liewei

Abstract

Abstract Background Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) are increasingly used in cancer research as a tool to inform cancer biology and drug response. Most available breast cancer PDXs have been generated in the metastatic setting. However, in the setting of operable breast cancer, PDX models both sensitive and resistant to chemotherapy are needed for drug development and prospective data are lacking regarding the clinical and molecular characteristics associated with PDX take rate in this setting. Methods The Breast Cancer Genome Guided Therapy Study (BEAUTY) is a prospective neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) trial of stage I-III breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant weekly taxane+/-trastuzumab followed by anthracycline-based chemotherapy. Using percutaneous tumor biopsies (PTB), we established and characterized PDXs from both primary (untreated) and residual (treated) tumors. Tumor take rate was defined as percent of patients with the development of at least one stably transplantable (passed at least for four generations) xenograft that was pathologically confirmed as breast cancer. Results Baseline PTB samples from 113 women were implanted with an overall take rate of 27.4% (31/113). By clinical subtype, the take rate was 51.3% (20/39) in triple negative (TN) breast cancer, 26.5% (9/34) in HER2+, 5.0% (2/40) in luminal B and 0% (0/3) in luminal A. The take rate for those with pCR did not differ from those with residual disease in TN (p = 0.999) and HER2+ (p = 0.2401) tumors. The xenografts from 28 of these 31 patients were such that at least one of the xenografts generated had the same molecular subtype as the patient. Among the 35 patients with residual tumor after NAC adequate for implantation, the take rate was 17.1%. PDX response to paclitaxel mirrored the patients’ clinical response in all eight PDX tested. Conclusions The generation of PDX models both sensitive and resistant to standard NAC is feasible and these models exhibit similar biological and drug response characteristics as the patients’ primary tumors. Taken together, these models may be useful for biomarker discovery and future drug development.

Funder

Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine

Pharmacogenomics Research Network

National Institutes of Health

Mayo Clinic Cancer Center

Mayo Clinic Breast Specialized Program of Research Excellence

John P. Guider

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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