A flexible electronic strain sensor for the real-time monitoring of tumor regression

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Abstract

Assessing the efficacy of cancer therapeutics in mouse models is a critical step in treatment development. However, low-resolution measurement tools and small sample sizes make determining drug efficacy in vivo a difficult and time-intensive task. Here, we present a commercially scalable wearable electronic strain sensor that automates the in vivo testing of cancer therapeutics by continuously monitoring the micrometer-scale progression or regression of subcutaneously implanted tumors at the minute time scale. In two in vivo cancer mouse models, our sensor discerned differences in tumor volume dynamics between drug- and vehicle-treated tumors within 5 hours following therapy initiation. These short-term regression measurements were validated through histology, and caliper and bioluminescence measurements taken over weeklong treatment periods demonstrated the correlation with longer-term treatment response. We anticipate that real-time tumor regression datasets could help expedite and automate the process of screening cancer therapies in vivo.

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Abramson, A., Chan, C. T., Khan, Y., Mermin-Bunnell, A., Matsuhisa, N., Fong, R., … Bao, Z. (2022). A flexible electronic strain sensor for the real-time monitoring of tumor regression. Science Advances, 8(37). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abn6550

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