Summary Two hundred and thirteen lung tumours of primary site and 42 metastases were heterotransplanted into nude mice with an overall success rate of 44%. There were differences in success between the histological types. Squamous cell and adenocarcinoma had the highest success rate (51% and 43%, respectively) whereas large cell and small cell carcinoma had a lower success rate (38% for both). The average volume doubling times in the first passage in nude mice ranged from 8.2 in large cell carcinomas to 18.9 days in adenocarcinomas. In subsequent passages an increase in growth rate was found, the overall average doubling time falling from 14.5 days in the first passage to 7.1 days in the second passage. In a study with 171 non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC), the growth data in nude mice were correlated with the clinical data of the corresponding patients. A relationship between the growth parameters in nude mice and prognosis of patients could not be found.During the past 3 years we have transplanted in the course of cooperative clinical studies 255 human lung tumours into nude mice. In this report we describe the incidence and rate of growth of these tumours in the nude mouse, as primary transplants and passaged tumours, and further we examined whether the growth characteristics of these tumours might be of clinical prognostic value. Comparison of a part of the presented data with other measurements and the clinical course will be published elsewhere.
Materials and methodsNude mice Athymic nude NMRI-mice (own breeding or Zentralinstitut fur Versuchstierzucht, Hannover), female, 6-9 weeks old, were kept under standardized conventional conditions (Makrolon cages, 270C room temperature, 50% relative humidity, autoclaved bedding) in a separated room especially controlled against infections. An autoclaved special diet (altromin 1410, Altromin Spezialfutterwerke, D-4937 Lage) and acidified water (pH 2-3) were given ad libitum.
Patients and tumoursTwo hundred and fifty five histologically verified lung tumours and their lymph node metastases from 213 patients were xenografted into nude mice.