Metastatic cutaneous melanoma is resistant to conventional therapies, resulting in poor prognoses. About 60% of these melanomas harbor the BrafV600E mutation, and most are responsive to the recently approved therapies that target the mutant Braf protein. However, disease generally recurs within 12-15 months. Additional promising results that demonstrate the possibility of durable responses in a subset of patients have recently been achieved with immune checkpoint modulation therapy that targets PD1/PDL1 or CTLA4 or the combination, and further immunomodulation therapies are being developed. However, it is not clear why some patients respond so well, while others don't respond at all. In addition, it will be critical to determine dosing regimens, effective combinations of multiple immunotherapies and their combination with cancer cells or other components of the cancer stroma. The metastatic melanoma GDA models developed in this project will be highly valuable in determining potential mechanisms of drug resistance and the development of effective combination treatments, dosing regimens and diagnostic strategies for evaluation in patients. We have established and validated several GDA models thus far. These include HGF/MET-driven primary and metastatic melanoma, including models in which tumors express luciferase. In addition, primary Braf driven and primary and metastatic HGF/MET/Braf driven models have been established. All models have been validated for responses to targeted therapies (vemarafinib in Braf and crizotinib in HGF/MET models).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Investigator-Initiated Intramural Research Projects (ZIA)
Project #
1ZIABC011462-04
Application #
9153930
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Basic Sciences
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
Zip Code
Day, Chi-Ping; Carter, John; Weaver Ohler, Zoe et al. (2014) ""Glowing head"" mice: a genetic tool enabling reliable preclinical image-based evaluation of cancers in immunocompetent allografts. PLoS One 9:e109956
Van Dyke, Terry; Merlino, Glenn (2012) ?-catenin in metastatic melanoma--the smoking gun reloaded. Pigment Cell Melanoma Res 25:125-6