Logo image
18F-FDG-PET/CT imaging in an IL-6- and MYC-driven mouse model of human multiple myeloma affords objective evaluation of plasma cell tumor progression and therapeutic response to the proteasome inhibitor ixazomib
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

18F-FDG-PET/CT imaging in an IL-6- and MYC-driven mouse model of human multiple myeloma affords objective evaluation of plasma cell tumor progression and therapeutic response to the proteasome inhibitor ixazomib

K. Duncan, T.R. Rosean, V.S. Tompkins, A Olivier, R Sompallae, F. Zhan, G. Tricot, M.R. Acevedo, L.L.B. Ponto, S.A. Walsh, …
Blood Cancer Journal, Vol.3(11), pp.1-12
11/29/2013
DOI: 10.1038/bcj.2013.61
PMCID: PMC3880444
PMID: 02429417
pdf
18F-FDG-PET_CT imaging in an IL-6- and MYC-driven mouse model of4.14 MBDownloadView
CC BY-NC-SA V4.0 Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.1038/bcj.2013.61View
Published (Version of record)Blood Cancer Journal 3:11 (2013) pp. 1-12. Open Access

Abstract

18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and computed tomography (CT) are useful imaging modalities for evaluating tumor progression and treatment responses in genetically engineered mouse models of solid human cancers, but the potential of integrated FDG-PET/CT for assessing tumor development and new interventions in transgenic mouse models of human blood cancers such as multiple myeloma (MM) has not been demonstrated. Here we use BALB/c mice that contain the newly developed iMycΔEμ gene insertion and the widely expressed H2-Ld-IL6 transgene to demonstrate that FDG-PET/CT affords an excellent research tool for assessing interleukin-6- and MYC-driven plasma cell tumor (PCT) development in a serial, reproducible and stage- and lesion-specific manner. We also show that FDG-PET/CT permits determination of objective drug responses in PCT-bearing mice treated with the investigational proteasome inhibitor ixazomib (MLN2238), the biologically active form of ixazomib citrate (MLN9708), that is currently in phase 3 clinical trials in MM. Overall survival of 5 of 6 ixazomib-treated mice doubled compared with mice left untreated. One outlier mouse presented with primary refractory disease. Our findings demonstrate the utility of FDG-PET/CT for preclinical MM research and suggest that this method will play an important role in the design and testing of new approaches to treat myeloma.

Pathology OAfund GEMM (genetically engineered mouse model) of human cancer preclinical cancer drug testing plasma cell neoplasia mice multiple myeloma Master of Music (MM)

Details

Metrics

250 File views/ downloads
56 Record Views
Logo image