A Renewable Tissue Resource of Phenotypically Stable, Biologically and Ethnically Diverse, Patient-Derived Human Breast Cancer Xenograft Models

  • Zhang, Xiaomei
  • Claerhout, Sofie
  • Prat, Aleix
  • Dobrolecki, Lacey E.
  • Petrovic, Ivana
  • Lai, Qing
  • Landis, Melissa D.
  • Wiechmann, Lisa
  • Schiff, Rachel
  • Giuliano, Mario
  • Wong, Helen
  • Fuqua, Suzanne W.
  • Contreras, Alejandro
  • Gutierrez, Carolina
  • Huang, Jian
  • Mao, Sufeng
  • Pavlick, Anne C.
  • Froehlich, Amber M.
  • Wu, Meng Fen
  • Tsimelzon, Anna
  • Hilsenbeck, Susan G.
  • Chen, Edward S.
  • Zuloaga, Pavel
  • Shaw, Chad A.
  • Rimawi, Mothaffar F.
  • Perou, Charles M.
  • Mills, Gordon B.
  • Chang, Jenny C.
  • Lewis, Michael T.
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Publication date
January 2013

Abstract

Breast cancer research is hampered by difficulties in obtaining and studying primary human breast tissue, and by the lack of in vivo preclinical models that reflect patient tumor biology accurately. To overcome these limitations, we propagated a cohort of human breast tumors grown in the epithelium-free mammary fat pad of SCID/Beige and NOD/SCID/IL2γ-receptor null (NSG) mice, under a series of transplant conditions. Both models yielded stably transplantable xenografts at comparably high rates (~21% and ~19%, respectively). Of the conditions tested, xenograft take rate was highest in the presence of a low-dose estradiol pellet. Overall, 32 stably transplantable xenograft lines were established, representing 25 unique patients. Most tumors yi...

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