Vascular response patterns to targeted therapies in murine breast cancer models with divergent degrees of malignancy

Author:

Hoffmann EmilyORCID,Gerwing Mirjam,Krähling Tobias,Hansen Uwe,Kronenberg Katharina,Masthoff Max,Geyer Christiane,Höltke Carsten,Wachsmuth Lydia,Schinner Regina,Hoerr Verena,Heindel Walter,Karst Uwe,Eisenblätter Michel,Maus Bastian,Helfen Anne,Faber Cornelius,Wildgruber Moritz

Abstract

Abstract Background Response assessment of targeted cancer therapies is becoming increasingly challenging, as it is not adequately assessable with conventional morphological and volumetric analyses of tumor lesions. The tumor microenvironment is particularly constituted by tumor vasculature which is altered by various targeted therapies. The aim of this study was to noninvasively assess changes in tumor perfusion and vessel permeability after targeted therapy in murine models of breast cancer with divergent degrees of malignancy. Methods Low malignant 67NR or highly malignant 4T1 tumor-bearing mice were treated with either the multi-kinase inhibitor sorafenib or immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI, combination of anti-PD1 and anti-CTLA4). Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) with i.v. injection of albumin-binding gadofosveset was conducted on a 9.4 T small animal MRI. Ex vivo validation of MRI results was achieved by transmission electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Results Therapy-induced changes in tumor vasculature differed between low and highly malignant tumors. Sorafenib treatment led to decreased tumor perfusion and endothelial permeability in low malignant 67NR tumors. In contrast, highly malignant 4T1 tumors demonstrated characteristics of a transient window of vascular normalization with an increase in tumor perfusion and permeability early after therapy initiation, followed by decreased perfusion and permeability parameters. In the low malignant 67NR model, ICI treatment also mediated vessel-stabilizing effects with decreased tumor perfusion and permeability, while ICI-treated 4T1 tumors exhibited increasing tumor perfusion with excessive vascular leakage. Conclusion DCE-MRI enables noninvasive assessment of early changes in tumor vasculature after targeted therapies, revealing different response patterns between tumors with divergent degrees of malignancy. DCE-derived tumor perfusion and permeability parameters may serve as vascular biomarkers that allow for repetitive examination of response to antiangiogenic treatment or immunotherapy.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research Münster

Medical Faculty of the University of Münster

Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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