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A human tumor lung metastasis model in athymic nude rats.

Cancer research (1989-09-15)
I Kjønniksen, R Storeng, A Pihl, T L McLemore, O Fodstad
RESUMEN

Experimental lung metastases regularly developed in athymic Han:rnu/rnu Rowett rats after i.v. injection of LOX human malignant melanoma cells. When 5 x 10(5) tumor cells were injected into 4-week-old rats, 89% of the animals died of lung tumors, with a mean survival time of 18 days. With 5- and 6-week-old rats, however, the fraction of animals that died decreased to 80 and 46%, with mean survival times of 35 and 38 days, respectively. The number of detectable lung colonies in each animal was about 35 in 5- and 6-week-old animals, compared to nearly 300 in 4-week-old rats. In the latter, a correlation was found between the number of tumor cells injected and the number of detectable lung colonies. The capacity of the LOX tumor to grow s.c. and to form experimental lung metastases was, by and large, similar in young nude rats and in nude mice, and no significant difference in morphology between the different tumors in the two species was seen. A high-resolution radiographic method was used to visualize lung colonies in the nude rats, and single tumors with diameters as small as 2-4 mm could be detected. By this method, for the first time, the effect of chemotherapy on a human tumor growing in a visceral organ of a rodent host could be followed by repeat X-ray examinations, mimicking a situation commonly faced in the clinic. This procedure may prove particularly useful for experimental chemotherapy studies, and may be extended to other human tumors that frequently metastasize to the lungs. Indications were obtained that some host-specific differences in tissue-preferenced growth might exist, a possibility that will be further explored.

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LOX-IMVI Human Melanoma Cell Line, LOX-IMVI human melanoma cell line is an excellent model for probing mechanisms of metastasis and for evaluation of chemotherapies.