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A Patient-derived Xenograft Model of Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors Identifies Sapanisertib as a Possible New Treatment for Everolimus-resistant Tumors.

Citation
Chamberlain, C. E., et al. “A Patient-Derived Xenograft Model Of Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors Identifies Sapanisertib As A Possible New Treatment For Everolimus-Resistant Tumors.”. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, pp. 2702-2709.
Author Chester E Chamberlain, Michael S German, Katherine Yang, Jason Wang, Henry VanBrocklin, Melanie Regan, Kevan M Shokat, Gregory S Ducker, Grace E Kim, Byron Hann, David B Donner, Robert S Warren, Alan P Venook, Emily K Bergsland, Danny Lee, Yucheng Wang, Eric K Nakakura
Abstract

Patients with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNET) commonly develop advanced disease and require systemic therapy. However, treatment options remain limited, in part, because experimental models that reliably emulate PNET disease are lacking. We therefore developed a patient-derived xenograft model of PNET (PDX-PNET), which we then used to evaluate two mTOR inhibitor drugs: FDA-approved everolimus and the investigational new drug sapanisertib. PDX-PNETs maintained a PNET morphology and PNET-specific gene expression signature with serial passage. PDX-PNETs also harbored mutations in genes previously associated with PNETs (such as and ), displayed activation of the mTOR pathway, and could be detected by Gallium-68 DOTATATE PET-CT. Treatment of PDX-PNETs with either everolimus or sapanisertib strongly inhibited growth. As seen in patients, some PDX-PNETs developed resistance to everolimus. However, sapanisertib, a more potent inhibitor of the mTOR pathway, caused tumor shrinkage in most everolimus-resistant tumors. Our PDX-PNET model is the first available, validated PDX model for PNET, and preclinical data from the use of this model suggest that sapanisertib may be an effective new treatment option for patients with PNET or everolimus-resistant PNET.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Molecular cancer therapeutics
Volume
17
Issue
12
Number of Pages
2702-2709
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1538-8514
DOI
10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-1204
Alternate Journal
Mol. Cancer Ther.
PMID
30254185
PMCID
PMC6279485
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