Lorenzo de la Rica, Research Programme Manager at Cancer Grand Challenges, provides his insights on the importance of this study.
Patient-derived mouse models provide information that wouldn’t be possible to obtain from humans, where treatments like surgery, radiation and hormone therapy are the current standard of care. These models make it possible to track whether DCIS lesions would progress to invasive breast cancer or not if a patient did not undergo surgery. Additionally, the models shorten the timeframes for those discoveries.
The mouse models are a significant improvement from the models currently available, and it is a resource that could be used to further test potential biomarkers for progression and treatment outcome, for example.
The collection also includes 19 distributable DCIS MIND models (accessible through CancerTools.org), available to researchers worldwide to further investigate the molecular subtypes of DCIS. In my opinion, having a DCIS PDX model that closely recapitulates what happens in humans provides a unique resource that will transcend the PRECISION team. It will be a Cancer Grand Challenges legacy that will potentially be used by researchers worldwide, to make discoveries for years to come.
The research was led by Jos Jonkers (the Netherlands Cancer Institute), Jelle Wesseling (the Netherlands Cancer Institute) and Colinda Scheele (VIB, Belgium). Read the paper in Cancer Cell.
The Cancer Grand Challenges PRECISION team is funded by Cancer Research UK and the Dutch Cancer Society.
Image: whole-mount image of DCIS MIND model, with DCIS cells in green and myoepithelial cells in magenta, which represent the ductal tree. Image by Stefan Hutten and Colinda Scheele.