Human tumour xenografts: a critical appraisal.
- 1 April 1980
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 4, 133-41
Abstract
Human tumours grown in immune-deficient mice are available for studies in experimental pathology and therapeutics. In addition to growth-delay experiments clonogenic assays can sometimes be performed. Xenografts often retain some characteristics of the source tumour but the amount of precise information on the maintenance of therapeutic sensitivity is small. Principal drawbacks include the difficulty of matching with human doses the dose of drugs given to the host mouse, and the probable existence of a substantial host reaction against the grafts. Principal benefits may be to studies that involve the intercomparison of human tumours in regard to therapeutic response.This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- The therapeutic response of three human tumor lines maintained in immune-suppressed mice.1975
- Hexamethylmelamine-induced regression of human lung tumors growing in immune deprived mice.1975
- The growth kinetics of xenografts of human colorectal tumours in immune deprived miceBritish Journal of Cancer, 1975
- Development of a method for assessing the antitumor activity of chemotherapeutic agents using human tumor xenografts.1974
- The Behaviour of Carcinoma of the Large Bowel in Man Following Transplantation into Immune Deprived MiceBritish Journal of Cancer, 1973
- Growth and antigenic properties of a biopsy‐derived Burkitt's lymphoma in thymus‐less (nude) miceInternational Journal of Cancer, 1973
- Human Tumours grown in MiceNature New Biology, 1972
- Metastatic Spread of Human Tumour Implanted into Thymectomized, Antithymocyte Serum Treated HamstersBritish Journal of Cancer, 1972
- The Sensitivity to Chemotherapeutic Agents of a Rat Tumour Grown in Immunosuppressed MiceBritish Journal of Cancer, 1971
- Epidemic Nonmeningitic Lymphocytic-Choriomeningitis-Virus InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1966