An <i>in vitro</i> vascularized micro-tumor model of human colorectal cancer recapitulates <i>in vivo</i> responses to standard-of-care therapy

Stephanie J. Hachey(Irvine Valley College), Silva Movsesyan(Irvine Valley College), Quy Nguyen(Irvine Valley College), Giselle Burton-Sojo(Irvine Valley College), Ani Tankazyan(Irvine Valley College), Jie Wu(Irvine Valley College), Tuyen Hoang(Irvine Valley College), Zhao Da(Irvine Valley College), Shuxiong Wang(Irvine Valley College), Michaela M.S. Hatch(Irvine Valley College), Elizabeth Celaya(Irvine Valley College), Samantha Gomez(Irvine Valley College), George Chen(Irvine Valley College), Ryan T. Davis(Irvine Valley College), Kevin Nee(Irvine Valley College), Nicholas Pervolarakis(Irvine Valley College), Devon A. Lawson(Irvine Valley College), Kai Kessenbrock(Irvine Valley College), Abraham P. Lee(Irvine Valley College), John Lowengrub(Irvine Valley College), Marian L. Waterman(Irvine Valley College), Christopher C.W. Hughes(Irvine Valley College)
Lab on a Chip
January 1, 2021
Cited by 124Open Access
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Abstract

Around 95% of anti-cancer drugs that show promise during preclinical study fail to gain FDA-approval for clinical use. This failure of the preclinical pipeline highlights the need for improved, physiologically-relevant in vitro models that can better serve as reliable drug-screening and disease modeling tools. The vascularized micro-tumor (VMT) is a novel three-dimensional model system (tumor-on-a-chip) that recapitulates the complex human tumor microenvironment, including perfused vasculature, within a transparent microfluidic device, allowing real-time study of drug responses and tumor-stromal interactions. Here we have validated this microphysiological system (MPS) platform for the study of colorectal cancer (CRC), the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths, by showing that gene expression, tumor heterogeneity, and treatment responses in the VMT more closely model CRC tumor clinicopathology than current standard drug screening modalities, including 2-dimensional monolayer culture and 3-dimensional spheroids.


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