Application of Drug Testing Platforms in Circulating Tumor Cells and Validation of a Patient-Derived Xenograft Mouse Model in Patient with Primary Intracranial Ependymomas with Extraneural Metastases

Muh Lii Liang, Ting Chi Yeh, Man Hsu Huang, Pao Shu Wu, Shih Pei Wu, Chun Chao Huang, Tsung Yu Yen, Wei Hsin Ting, Jen Yin Hou, Jia Yun Huang, Yi Huei Ding, Jia Huei Zheng, Hsi Che Liu, Che Sheng Ho, Shiu Jau Chen, Tsung Han Hsieh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Primary intracranial ependymoma is a challenging tumor to treat despite the availability of multidisciplinary therapeutic modalities, including surgical resection, radiotherapy, and adjuvant chemotherapy. After the completion of initial treatment, when resistant tumor cells recur, salvage therapy needs to be carried out with a more precise strategy. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have specifically been detected and validated for patients with primary or recurrent diffused glioma. The CTC drug screening platform can be used to perform a mini-invasive liquid biopsy for potential drug selection. The validation of potential drugs in a patient-derived xenograft (PDX) mouse model based on the same patient can serve as a preclinical testing platform. Here, we present the application of a drug testing model in a six-year-old girl with primary ependymoma on the posterior fossa, type A (EPN-PFA). She suffered from tumor recurrence with intracranial and spinal seeding at 2 years after her first operation and extraneural metastases in the pleura, lung, mediastinum, and distant femoral bone at 4 years after initial treatment. The CTC screening platform results showed that everolimus and entrectinib could be used to decrease CTC viability. The therapeutic efficacy of these two therapeutic agents has also been validated in a PDX mouse model from the same patient, and the results showed that these two therapeutic agents significantly decreased tumor growth. After precise drug screening and the combination of focal radiation on the femoral bone with everolimus chemotherapy, the whole-body bone scan showed significant shrinkage of the metastatic tumor on the right femoral bone. This novel approach can combine liquid biopsy, CTC drug testing platforms, and PDX model validation to achieve precision medicine in rare and challenging tumors with extraneural metastases.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1232
JournalDiagnostics
Volume13
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2023

Keywords

  • circulating tumor cells
  • drug screening
  • ependymoma
  • extraneural metastasis
  • patient-derived xenograft

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Clinical Biochemistry

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