Department of Surgery, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States of America.
Department of Neurological Surgery, Rutgers, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Oct 17;12(10):e0186483. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186483. eCollection 2017.
Glioblastoma is highly aggressive. Early dispersal of the primary tumor renders localized therapy ineffective. Recurrence always occurs and leads to patient death. Prior studies have shown that dispersal of Glioblastoma can be significantly reduced by Dexamethasone (Dex), a drug currently used to control brain tumor related edema. However, due to high doses and significant side effects, treatment is tapered and discontinued as soon as edema has resolved. Prior analyses of the dispersal inhibitory effects of Dex were performed on tissue culture plastic, or polystyrene filters seeded with normal human astrocytes, conditions which inherently differ from the parenchymal architecture of neuronal tissue. The aim of this study was to utilize an ex-vivo model to examine Dex-mediated inhibition of tumor cell migration from low-passage, human Glioblastoma neurospheres on multiple substrates including mouse retina, and slices of mouse, pig, and human brain. We also determined the lowest possible Dex dose that can inhibit dispersal. Analysis by Two-Factor ANOVA shows that for GBM-2 and GBM-3, Dex treatment significantly reduces dispersal on all tissue types. However, the magnitude of the effect appears to be tissue-type specific. Moreover, there does not appear to be a difference in Dex-mediated inhibition of dispersal between mouse retina, mouse brain and human brain. To estimate the lowest possible dose at which Dex can inhibit dispersal, LogEC50 values were compared by Extra Sum-of-Squares F-test. We show that it is possible to achieve 50% reduction in dispersal with Dex doses ranging from 3.8 x10-8M to 8.0x10-9M for GBM-2, and 4.3x10-8M to 1.8x10-9M for GBM-3, on mouse retina and brain slices, respectively. These doses are 3-30-fold lower than those used to control edema. This study extends our previous in vitro data and identifies the mouse retina as a potential substrate for in vivo studies of GBM dispersal.
胶质母细胞瘤具有高度侵袭性。原发性肿瘤的早期扩散使得局部治疗无效。复发总是发生,并导致患者死亡。先前的研究表明,地塞米松(Dex)可显著减少胶质母细胞瘤的扩散,地塞米松是一种目前用于控制脑肿瘤相关水肿的药物。然而,由于剂量高和副作用大,一旦水肿得到控制,治疗就会逐渐减少并停止。先前对 Dex 扩散抑制作用的分析是在组织培养塑料或接种正常人类星形胶质细胞的聚苯乙烯滤器上进行的,这些条件与神经元组织的实质结构固有不同。本研究旨在利用离体模型研究 Dex 对多种基质上低传代人胶质母细胞瘤神经球肿瘤细胞迁移的抑制作用,包括小鼠视网膜和小鼠、猪和人脑切片。我们还确定了可以抑制扩散的最低 Dex 剂量。双因素方差分析表明,对于 GBM-2 和 GBM-3,Dex 处理显著降低了所有组织类型的扩散。然而,这种效应的大小似乎是组织类型特异性的。此外,在小鼠视网膜、小鼠脑和人脑之间,Dex 介导的抑制扩散似乎没有差异。为了估计 Dex 抑制扩散的最低可能剂量,通过 Extra Sum-of-Squares F 检验比较了 LogEC50 值。我们表明,对于 GBM-2,Dex 剂量范围为 3.8x10-8M 至 8.0x10-9M,对于 GBM-3,Dex 剂量范围为 4.3x10-8M 至 1.8x10-9M,可以在小鼠视网膜和脑切片上实现 50%的扩散减少。这些剂量比用于控制水肿的剂量低 3-30 倍。本研究扩展了我们以前的体外数据,并将小鼠视网膜确定为研究 GBM 扩散的体内研究的潜在基质。