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Influence of handling conditions on the establishment and propagation of head and neck cancer patient derived xenografts
Stein, Andrew P; Saha, Sandeep; Liu, Cheng Z; Hartig, Gregory K; Lambert, Paul F; Kimple, Randall J
BACKGROUND: Patient derived xenografts (PDXs) for head and neck cancer (HNC) and other cancers represent powerful research platforms. Most groups implant patient tissue into immunodeficient mice immediately although the significance of this time interval is anecdotal. We tested the hypothesis that the time from tumor excision to implantation is crucial for PDX passaging and establishment. METHODS: We examined whether time or storage medium affected PDX viability for passaging two established HNC PDXs (UW-SCC34, UW-SCC52). Tumors were harvested, stored in ice-cold media or saline for 0-48 hours, and implanted into new mice. Tumor growth was compared by two-way ANOVA with respect to time and storage condition. Three new HNC PDXs (UW-SCC63-65) were generated by implanting patient tissue into mice immediately (Time 0) and 24 hours after receiving tissue from the operating room. RESULTS: Similar quantities of tumor were implanted into each mouse. At the end of the experiment, no significant difference was seen in mean tumor weight between the media and saline storage conditions for UW-SCC34 or UW-SCC52 (p = 0.650 and p = 0.177, respectively). No difference in tumor formation prevalence was seen on the basis of time from harvest to implantation (>/=13 of 16 tumors grew at every time point). Histological analysis showed strong similarity to the initial tumor across all groups. Tumors developed at both Time 0 and 24 hours for UW-SCC63 and UW-SCC64. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated that neither storage medium nor time from tumor excision to implantation (up to 48 hours) affected viability or histological differentiation in a subsequent passage for two HNC PDXs. Moreover, we revealed that fresh patient tissue is viable up to 24 hours post-resection. This information is important as it applies to the development and sharing of PDXs.
PMCID:4072729
PMID: 24967635
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 1499512
Primary Retroperitoneal Mullerian Neoplasms: Report of 2 Cases With Rare Finding [Meeting Abstract]
Chang, Theodore S; Nagarathinam, Rajeswari; Liu, Cheng Z; Hassell, Lewis A
ORIGINAL:0011095
ISSN: 1543-2165
CID: 2090372
Down-regulation of Wnt inhibitory factor 1 is an early event in oropharyngeal cancer associated with tobacco-use [Meeting Abstract]
Queimado, Lurdes VF; Raju, Ryan; Liu, Cheng; Ramachandran, Ilangovan; Brabcova, Eva; Naifeh, Matt; Krempl, Greg
ORIGINAL:0011100
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 2090422
Androgen-producing steroid cell ovarian tumor in a young woman and subsequent spontaneous pregnancy
Sielert, Lauren; Liu, Cheng; Nagarathinam, Rajeswari; Craig, Latasha B
PURPOSE: To describe the presentation and fertility sparing treatment of a young woman found to have a steroid cell tumor not otherwise specified (NOS) and her spontaneous pregnancy and delivery shortly after surgery. METHODS: A 20-year-old Hispanic female presented with hirsuitism, virilization, and elevated androgen levels (testosterone 328 ng/dL) and was wrongly diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome. Four months later she sought a second opinion. Her androgens were as follows: testosterone level 485 ng/dL, androstenedione 1,738 ng/dL and DHEA 1,459 ng/dL. She had normal levels of progesterone, estradiol, and DHEA-SO4. On transvaginal ultrasound she had a solid-appearing right ovarian mass. She underwent fertility sparing surgery with a laparoscopic right oophorectomy. RESULTS: Gross and histological pathology confirmed a benign steroid cell tumor NOS. She had rapid normalization of all androgens 13 days after surgery. She had spontaneous resumption of menses 4 months later. She conceived despite using emergency contraception approximately 9 months following surgery and delivered a healthy boy at term without complication. CONCLUSION: Prompt evaluation for an androgen producing tumor should be performed when testosterone levels are greater than 200 ng/dL. Pregnancy following removal of this rare tumor has not previously been reported.
PMCID:3800527
PMID: 23868533
ISSN: 1573-7330
CID: 2088462
Image of the month. Extramedullary plasmacytoma [Case Report]
Landmann, Alessandra; Makipour, J John; Morgan, Ashley; Postier, Russell; Pant, Shubham; Liu, Cheng; Anderson, Justin
PMID: 23324848
ISSN: 2168-6262
CID: 2088472
Rhabdomyoma of the tongue base masquerading as an arteriovenous malformation
Chapter by: Kao, Elizabeth C; Krempl, Greg A; Lui, Cheng
in: Meeting Abstracts from the 8th International Conference on Head and Neck Cancer by
[S.l. : s.n., 2012]
pp. ?-?
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2090412
C-KIT expression in head and neck mucosal melanoma
Chapter by: Raju, Ryan P; Liu, Chiang; Dunn, Terry; Vasan, Nilesh; Medina, Jesus
in: Meeting Abstracts from the 8th International Conference on Head and Neck Cancer by
[S.l. : s.n., 2012]
pp. ?-?
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2090402
Maintenance of tissue orientation and pathologic margins for partial glossectomy- review of a new technique
Chapter by: Pierson, Brandon W; Vasan, Nilesh R; Liu, Cheng Z
in: Meeting Abstracts from the 8th International Conference on Head and Neck Cancer by
[S.l. : s.n., 2012]
pp. ?-?
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2090382
Impact of pathology overreads at head and neck tumor board
Chapter by: Kao, Elizabeth C; Liu, Cheng Z; Krempl, Greg A
in: Meeting Abstracts from the 8th International Conference on Head and Neck Cancer by
[S.l. : s.n., 2012]
pp. ?-?
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2090392
Multifocal Intraductal Tubulopapillary Neoplasms With Extensive Invasion of the Pancreas: A Case Report and Review of the Literature [Meeting Abstract]
Lindley, Sarah W; Johnson, Jeremy J; Lindley, Peter H; Liu, Cheng; Yang, Jian
ORIGINAL:0011094
ISSN: 1543-2165
CID: 2090192