Most prostate cancers are adenocarcinomas that develop from the gland cells that produce seminal fluid. The American Cancer Society's estimates are about 248,530 new cases in the United States for 2021, resulting in approximately 34,130 deaths.1 About 1 man in 8 will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime and 1 in 41 will die of it. 1 Globally, prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in men, behind lung cancer.1 Fortunately, prostate cancer, when detected and treated early, has a nearly 100% estimated five-year survival rate for U.S. patients.2 Depending on the tumor stage, treatments can include active surveillance prostatectomy, beam radiation therapy, brachytherapy, hormone therapy, chemotherapy and treatments aimed at bone metastases in Stage IV cancers. To develop novel therapeutics, as monotherapies or in combination with clinical standards of care, testing in the most appropriate preclinical tumor model is key.
Preclinical models that closely reflect human disease are of paramount importance for research discovery and drug testing. There is a limited number of xenograft models that served the field well, especially LNCaP, PC3, and DU145 See here. However, the drawback to using xenograft models is the lack of a fully competent immune system. Syngeneic models, on the other hand, are developed in fully immunocompetent animals, allowing for the testing of immunotherapies and combinatorial approaches. In the preclinical setting, an often-used tumor model is the RM-1 syngeneic prostate cancer model in C57BL/6 mice.3 The tumor cell line was developed from urogenital sinus Zipras/myc9 retrovirus-injected cells of C57BL/6 embryos implanted under the renal capsule of isogenic adult male mice. In the examples shown below, we will show growth characteristics of RM-1 tumors, their immune profile and their response to checkpoint inhibitors and radiation.
In vitro, RM-1 cells grow as an adherent population taking on a fibroblast-like morphology. In vivo, subcutaneous implantation of 5x105 RM-1 cells in the axilla of male 6–7-week-old C57BL/6 mice form aggressive tumors with a median doubling time of ~2 days. The median time to expected staging (100 mm3) is 6 days, and the time to disease progression (2000 mm3) is 12 days on average (Figure 1). Animals show progressive weight gain throughout the duration.