A computational modeling approach for dosing endoscopic intratumoral chemotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer

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Abstract

We recently developed a computational model of cisplatin pharmacodynamics in an endobronchial lung tumor following ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle injection (EBUS-TBNI). The model suggests that it is more efficacious to apportion the cisplatin dose between injections at different sites rather than giving it all in a single central injection, but the model was calibrated only on blood cisplatin data from a single patient. Accordingly, we applied a modified version of our original model in a set of 32 patients undergoing EBUS-TBNI for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We used the model to predict clinical responses and compared them retrospectively to actual patient outcomes. The model correctly predicted the clinical response in 72% of cases, with 80% accuracy for adenocarcinomas and 62.5% accuracy for squamous-cell lung cancer. We also found a power-law relationship between tumor volume and the minimal dose needed to induce a response, with the power-law exponent depending on the number of injections administered. Our results suggest that current injection strategies may be significantly over- or under-dosing the agent depending on tumor size, and that computational modeling can be a useful planning tool for EBUS-TBNI of cisplatin in lung cancer.

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Mori, V., Bates, J. H. T., Jantz, M., Mehta, H. J., & Kinsey, C. M. (2022). A computational modeling approach for dosing endoscopic intratumoral chemotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Scientific Reports, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-03849-w

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