4.7 Article

Hydraulic conductivity of human cancer tissue: A hybrid study

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/btm2.10617

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chemical engineering-based bioprocessing; computational modeling; drug delivery; tissue engineering

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This study measured the hydraulic conductivity of tumor tissue and found that it is very limited in human tumor tissue. Moreover, the values of hydraulic conductivity varied significantly between different tumor types and samples.
Background: Elevated tumor tissue interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) is an adverse biomechanical biomarker that predicts poor therapy response and an aggressive phenotype. Advances in functional imaging have opened the prospect of measuring IFP non-invasively. Image-based estimation of the IFP requires knowledge of the tissue hydraulic conductivity (K), a measure for the ease of bulk flow through the interstitium. However, data on the magnitude of K in human cancer tissue are not available.Methods: We measured the hydraulic conductivity of tumor tissue using modified Ussing chambers in surgical resection specimens. The effect of the tumor microenvironment (TME) on K was investigated by quantifying the collagen content, cell density, and fibroblast density of the tested samples using quantitative immune histochemistry. Also, we developed a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model to evaluate the role of K on interstitial fluid flow and drug transport in solid tumors.Results: The results show that the hydraulic conductivity of human tumor tissues is very limited, ranging from approximately 10(-15) to 10(-14) m(2)/Pa.s. Moreover, K values varied significantly between tumor types and between different samples from the same tumor. A significant inverse correlation was found between collagen fiber density and hydraulic conductivity values. However, no correlation was detected between K and cancer cell or fibroblast densities. The computational model demonstrated the impact of K on the interstitial fluid flow and the drug concentration profile: higher K values led to a lower IFP and deeper drug penetration.Conclusions: Human tumor tissue is characterized by a very limited hydraulic conductivity, representing a barrier to effective drug transport. The results of this study can inform the development of realistic computational models, facilitate non-invasive IFP estimation, and contribute to stromal targeting anticancer therapies.

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