Department of Animal Science, Iowa State University, 2255 Kildee Hall, 806 Stange Road, Ames, IA, 50011, USA.
Department of Radiology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Mamm Genome. 2022 Mar;33(1):230-240. doi: 10.1007/s00335-021-09907-y. Epub 2021 Sep 2.
Swine biomedical models have been gaining in popularity over the last decade, particularly for applications in oncology research. Swine models for cancer research include pigs that have severe combined immunodeficiency for xenotransplantation studies, genetically modified swine models which are capable of developing tumors in vivo, as well as normal immunocompetent pigs. In recent years, there has been a low success rate for the approval of new oncological therapeutics in clinical trials. The two leading reasons for these failures are either due to toxicity and safety issues or lack of efficacy. As all therapeutics must be tested within animal models prior to clinical testing, there are opportunities to expand the ability to assess efficacy and toxicity profiles within the preclinical testing phases of new therapeutics. Most preclinical in vivo testing is performed in mice, canines, and non-human primates. However, swine models are an alternative large animal model for cancer research with similarity to human size, genetics, and physiology. Additionally, tumorigenesis pathways are similar between human and pigs in that similar driver mutations are required for transformation. Due to their larger size, the development of orthotopic tumors is easier than in smaller rodent models; additionally, porcine models can be harnessed for testing of new interventional devices and radiological/surgical approaches as well. Taken together, swine are a feasible option for preclinical therapeutic and device testing. The goals of this resource are to provide a broad overview on regulatory processes required for new therapeutics and devices for use in the clinic, cross-species differences in oncological therapeutic responses, as well as to provide an overview of swine oncology models that have been developed that could be used for preclinical testing to fulfill regulatory requirements.
在过去十年中,猪生物医学模型越来越受欢迎,特别是在肿瘤学研究中的应用。用于癌症研究的猪模型包括用于异种移植研究的严重联合免疫缺陷猪、能够在体内产生肿瘤的基因修饰猪模型,以及正常免疫功能的猪。近年来,新的肿瘤治疗方法在临床试验中的批准成功率很低。这些失败的两个主要原因要么是由于毒性和安全性问题,要么是疗效不足。由于所有治疗方法在进行临床试验之前都必须在动物模型中进行测试,因此有机会在新治疗方法的临床前测试阶段扩大评估疗效和毒性特征的能力。大多数临床前体内测试是在小鼠、犬和非人类灵长类动物中进行的。然而,猪模型是一种替代的大型动物癌症研究模型,与人类的大小、遗传和生理相似。此外,人类和猪的肿瘤发生途径相似,因为转化需要类似的驱动突变。由于它们的体型较大,与较小的啮齿动物模型相比,原位肿瘤的发展更容易;此外,还可以利用猪模型来测试新的介入设备和放射/手术方法。综上所述,猪是临床前治疗和设备测试的可行选择。本资源的目标是提供一个广泛的概述,介绍用于临床的新治疗方法和设备所需的监管流程、肿瘤治疗反应的跨物种差异,以及概述已经开发的可用于临床前测试以满足监管要求的猪肿瘤模型。