Microtubule disruption reduces metastasis more effectively than primary tumor growth

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Abstract

Clinical cancer imaging focuses on tumor growth rather than metastatic phenotypes. The microtubule-depolymerizing drug, Vinorelbine, reduced the metastatic phenotypes of microtentacles, reattachment and tumor cell clustering more than tumor cell viability. Treating mice with Vinorelbine for only 24 h had no significant effect on primary tumor survival, but median metastatic tumor survival was extended from 8 to 30 weeks. Microtentacle inhibition by Vinorelbine was also detectable within 1 h, using tumor cells isolated from blood samples. As few as 11 tumor cells were sufficient to yield 90% power to detect this 1 h Vinorelbine drug response, demonstrating feasibility with the small number of tumor cells available from patient biopsies. This study establishes a proof-of-concept that targeted microtubule disruption can selectively inhibit metastasis and reveals that existing FDA-approved therapies could have anti-metastatic actions that are currently overlooked when focusing exclusively on tumor growth.

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Thompson, K. N., Ju, J. A., Ory, E. C., Pratt, S. J. P., Lee, R. M., Mathias, T. J., … Martin, S. S. (2022). Microtubule disruption reduces metastasis more effectively than primary tumor growth. Breast Cancer Research, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-022-01506-2

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