Osteosarcoma occurs mostly in children and young adults, who are treated with multiple agents in combination with limb-salvage surgery. However, the overall 5-year survival rate for patients with recurrent or metastatic osteosarcoma is 20- 30% which has not improved significantly over 30 years. Refractory patients would benefit from precise individualized therapy. We report here that a patient-derived osteosarcoma growing in a subcutaneous nude-mouse model was regressed by tumortargeting Salmonella typhimurium A1-R (S. typhimurium A1-R, p < 0.001 compared to untreated control). The osteosarcoma was only partially sensitive to the moleculartargeting drug sorafenib, which did not arrest its growth. S. typhimurium A1-R was significantly more effective than sorafenib (P < 0.001). S. typhimurium grew in the treated tumors and caused extensive necrosis of the tumor tissue. These data show that S. typhimurium A1-R is powerful therapy for an osteosarcoma patient-derived xenograft model.
CITATION STYLE
Murakami, T., Igarashi, K., Kawaguchi, K., Kiyuna, T., Zhang, Y., Zhao, M., … Hoffman, R. M. (2017). Tumor-targeting Salmonella typhimurium A1-R regresses an osteosarcoma in a patient-derived xenograft model resistant to a molecular-targeting drug. Oncotarget, 8(5), 8035–8042. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14040
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