PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Intra-cavity stem cell therapy inhibits tumor progression in a novel murine model of medulloblastoma surgical resection.

  • Onyinyechukwu Okolie,
  • David M Irvin,
  • Juli R Bago,
  • Kevin Sheets,
  • Andrew Satterlee,
  • Abigail G Carey-Ewend,
  • Vivien Lettry,
  • Raluca Dumitru,
  • Scott Elton,
  • Matthew G Ewend,
  • C Ryan Miller,
  • Shawn D Hingtgen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
p. e0198596

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Cytotoxic neural stem cells (NSCs) have emerged as a promising treatment for Medulloblastoma (MB), the most common malignant primary pediatric brain tumor. The lack of accurate pre-clinical models incorporating surgical resection and tumor recurrence limits advancement in post-surgical MB treatments. Using cell lines from two of the 5 distinct MB molecular sub-groups, in this study, we developed an image-guided mouse model of MB surgical resection and investigate intra-cavity NSC therapy for post-operative MB. METHODS:Using D283 and Daoy human MB cells engineered to express multi-modality optical reporters, we created the first image-guided resection model of orthotopic MB. Brain-derived NSCs and novel induced NSCs (iNSCs) generated from pediatric skin were engineered to express the pro-drug/enzyme therapy thymidine kinase/ganciclovir, seeded into the post-operative cavity, and used to investigate intra-cavity therapy for post-surgical MB. RESULTS:We found that surgery reduced MB volumes by 92%, and the rate of post-operative MB regrowth increased 3-fold compared to pre-resection growth. Real-time imaging showed NSCs rapidly homed to MB, migrating 1.6-fold faster and 2-fold farther in the presence of tumors, and co-localized with MB present in the contra-lateral hemisphere. Seeding of cytotoxic NSCs into the post-operative surgical cavity decreased MB volumes 15-fold and extended median survival 133%. As an initial step towards novel autologous therapy in human MB patients, we found skin-derived iNSCs homed to MB cells, while intra-cavity iNSC therapy suppressed post-surgical tumor growth and prolonged survival of MB-bearing mice by 123%. CONCLUSIONS:We report a novel image-guided model of MB resection/recurrence and provide new evidence of cytotoxic NSCs/iNSCs delivered into the surgical cavity effectively target residual MB foci.