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Preclinical Models of Malignant Mesothelioma.

Joseph R Testa ,
Anton Berns

Abstract

Rodent models of malignant mesothelioma help facilitate the understanding of the biology of this highly lethal cancer and to develop and test new interventions. Introducing the same genetic lesions as found in human mesothelioma in mice results in tumors that show close resemblance with the human disease counterpart. This includes the extensive inflammatory responses that characterize human malignant mesothelioma. The relatively fast development of mesothelioma in mice when the appropriate combination of lesions is introduced, with or without exposure to asbestos, make the autochthonous models particularly useful for testing new treatment strategies in an immunocompetent setting, whereas Patient-Derived Xenograft models are particularly useful to assess effects of inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity and human-specific features of mesothelioma. It is to be expected that new insights obtained by studying these experimental systems will lead to new more effective treatments for this devastating disease.

More about this publication

Frontiers in oncology

Volume 10
Pages 101
Publication date 03-03-2020

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.3389/fonc.2020.00101
Europe PubMed Central 32117751
Pubmed 32117751

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