4.4 Article

Intra-iliac Artery Injection for Efficient and Selective Modeling of Microscopic Bone Metastasis

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 115, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/53982

Keywords

Cancer Research; Issue 115; Breast cancer; Bone metastasis; Disseminated tumor cells; Microscopic metastasis; Intra-iliac artery injection; Metastasis modeling

Funding

  1. NCI [CA151293, CA183878]
  2. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  3. U.S. Department of Defense DAMD [W81XWH-13-1-0195, W81XWH-13-1-0296]
  4. Pilot Award [CA149196-04]
  5. McNair Medical Institute

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Intra-iliac artery (IIA) injection is an efficient approach to introduce metastatic lesions of various cancer cells in animals. Compared to the widely used intra-cardiac and intra-tibial injections, IIA injection brings several advantages. First, it can deliver a large quantity of cancer cells specifically to hind limb bones, thereby providing spatiotemporally synchronized early-stage colonization events and allowing robust quantification and swift detection of disseminated tumor cells. Second, it injects cancer cells into the circulation without damaging the local tissues, thereby avoiding inflammatory and wound-healing processes that confound the bone colonization process. Third, IIA injection causes very little metastatic growth in non-bone organs, thereby preventing animals from succumbing to other vital metastases, and allowing continuous monitoring of indolent bone lesions. These advantages are especially useful for the inspection of progression from single cancer cells to multi-cell micrometastases, which has largely been elusive in the past. When combined with cutting-edge approaches of biological imaging and bone histology, IIA injection can be applied to various research purposes related to bone metastases.

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