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Zebrafish xenografts as a fast screening platform for bevacizumab cancer therapy.

Cátia Rebelo de AlmeidaRaquel Valente MendesAnna PezzarossaJoaquim GagoCarlos CarvalhoAntónio AlvesVitor NunesMaria José BritoMaria-Joao CardosoJoana RibeiroFatima CardosoMiguel Godinho FerreiraRita Fior
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
Despite promising preclinical results, average response rates to anti-VEGF therapies, such as bevacizumab, are reduced for most cancers, while incurring in remarkable costs and side effects. Currently, there are no biomarkers available to select patients that can benefit from this therapy. Depending on the individual tumor, anti-VEGF therapies can either block or promote metastasis. In this context, an assay able to predict individual responses prior to treatment, including the impact on metastasis would prove of great value to guide treatment options. Here we show that zebrafish xenografts are able to reveal different responses to bevacizumab in just 4 days, evaluating not only individual tumor responses but also the impact on angiogenesis and micrometastasis. Importantly, we perform proof-of-concept experiments where clinical responses in patients were compared with their matching zebrafish Patient-Derived Xenografts - zAvatars, opening the possibility of using the zebrafish model to screen bevacizumab therapy in a personalized manner.
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