Organ-on-a-chip platforms as novel advancements for studying heterogeneity, metastasis, and drug efficacy in breast cancer
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Elsevier Inc.
Abstract
Breast cancer has the highest cancer incidence rate in women worldwide. Therapies for breast cancer have shown high success rates, yet many cases of recurrence and drug resistance are still reported. Developing innovative strategies for studying breast cancer may improve therapeutic outcomes of the disease by providing better insight into the associated molecular mechanisms. A novel advancement in breast cancer research is the utilization of organ-on-a-chip (OOAC) technology to establish in vitro physiologically relevant breast cancer biomimetic models. This emerging technology combines microfluidics and tissue culturing methods to establish organ-specific micro fabricated culture models. Here, we shed light on the advantages of OOAC platforms over conventional in vivo and in vitro models in terms of mimicking tissue heterogeneity, disease progression, and facilitating pharmacological drug testing with a focus on models of the mammary gland in both normal and breast cancer states. By highlighting the various designs and applications of the breast-on-a-chip platforms, we show that the latter propose means to facilitate breast cancer-related studies and provide an efficient approach for therapeutic drug screening in vitro. © 2022 Elsevier Inc.
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Breast cancer, Cell heterogeneity, Cytotoxicity, Drug testing, Extracellular matrix, Metastasis, Microfluidic technology, Organ-on-a-chip, Stroma, Tumor microenvironment, Biomimetics, Breast neoplasms, Drug evaluation, preclinical, Female, Humans, Lab-on-a-chip devices, Microfluidics, Alpha1 integrin, Biomimetic material, Chemokine receptor cxcr2, Chitinase 3 like protein 1, Dimeticone, Epithelial derived neutrophil activating factor 78, Metalloproteinase, Microrna, Atypical ductal hyperplasia, Benign neoplasm, Breast cancer recurrence, Cell proliferation, Drug efficacy, Egfr signaling, Human, Hypoxia, Lobular carcinoma in situ, Mammary gland, Mapk signaling, Micromolding, Morphogenesis, Pi3k/akt signaling, Postmenopause, Review, Two dimensional cell culture, Breast tumor, Lab on a chip, Preclinical study, Procedures