Iatrogenic pancreatic cancer metastasis after islet infusion is a potential risk of islet autotransplantation performed after pancreatectomy. To model this risk, islets and/or pancreatic exocrine clusters obtained from a genetically engineered mouse model for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (the LSL-KrasG12D/+;LSL-Trp53R172H/+;Pdx-1-Cre, termed KPC mouse) were transplanted via the portal vein in syngeneic wild type (WT) severely diabetic recipients in the following treatment groups: group A (n = 11) received KPC exocrine clusters in volume equal to 250 islet equivalents (IEQs); group B (n = 12) received 250 WT IEQs mixed with KPC exocrine clusters (1:1 volume ratio); group C (n = 5) received 250 KPC IEQs, and group D (n = 7) received 250 WT IEQs. The incidence of hepatic metastasis was assessed by magnetic resonance imaging and histology over the 13 months of follow-up. Overall survival was not different in the four groups. No mice developed liver metastases during the follow-up. Two mice developed spontaneous tumors: a liver hepatocellular tumor in group A and a malignant lymphoma in group D. Islets and/or exocrine clusters obtained by KPC mouse, a model that develops pancreatic cancer with 100% penetrance, do not retain the same risk of tumor development when transplanted via the portal vein in a syngeneic diabetic recipient.

Dugnani, E., Pasquale, V., Liberati, D., Citro, A., Cantarelli, E., Pellegrini, S., et al. (2017). Modeling the Iatrogenic Pancreatic Cancer Risk After Islet Autotransplantation in Mouse. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, 17(10), 2720-2727 [10.1111/ajt.14360].

Modeling the Iatrogenic Pancreatic Cancer Risk After Islet Autotransplantation in Mouse

Pasquale V.;Marra P.;
2017

Abstract

Iatrogenic pancreatic cancer metastasis after islet infusion is a potential risk of islet autotransplantation performed after pancreatectomy. To model this risk, islets and/or pancreatic exocrine clusters obtained from a genetically engineered mouse model for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (the LSL-KrasG12D/+;LSL-Trp53R172H/+;Pdx-1-Cre, termed KPC mouse) were transplanted via the portal vein in syngeneic wild type (WT) severely diabetic recipients in the following treatment groups: group A (n = 11) received KPC exocrine clusters in volume equal to 250 islet equivalents (IEQs); group B (n = 12) received 250 WT IEQs mixed with KPC exocrine clusters (1:1 volume ratio); group C (n = 5) received 250 KPC IEQs, and group D (n = 7) received 250 WT IEQs. The incidence of hepatic metastasis was assessed by magnetic resonance imaging and histology over the 13 months of follow-up. Overall survival was not different in the four groups. No mice developed liver metastases during the follow-up. Two mice developed spontaneous tumors: a liver hepatocellular tumor in group A and a malignant lymphoma in group D. Islets and/or exocrine clusters obtained by KPC mouse, a model that develops pancreatic cancer with 100% penetrance, do not retain the same risk of tumor development when transplanted via the portal vein in a syngeneic diabetic recipient.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
animal models: murine; autotransplantation; cancer/malignancy/neoplasia; diabetes: new onset/posttransplant; islet isolation; islet transplantation; translational research/science;
English
2017
17
10
2720
2727
reserved
Dugnani, E., Pasquale, V., Liberati, D., Citro, A., Cantarelli, E., Pellegrini, S., et al. (2017). Modeling the Iatrogenic Pancreatic Cancer Risk After Islet Autotransplantation in Mouse. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, 17(10), 2720-2727 [10.1111/ajt.14360].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/603892
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