Identification and credentialing of invasive lobular carcinoma patient-derived Xenograft models.
Invasive lobular cancer (ILC) is the most common special breast cancer subtype, accounting for 10-15% of all cases.
APA
Hooda J, Atkinson JM, et al. (2026). Identification and credentialing of invasive lobular carcinoma patient-derived Xenograft models.. Disease models & mechanisms. https://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.052710
MLA
Hooda J, et al.. "Identification and credentialing of invasive lobular carcinoma patient-derived Xenograft models.." Disease models & mechanisms, 2026.
PMID
41943626
Abstract
Invasive lobular cancer (ILC) is the most common special breast cancer subtype, accounting for 10-15% of all cases. The pathognomonic feature of ILC is loss of E-cadherin (CDH1), leading to discohesive single-file growth. Although ILCs show better prognostic factors than No Special Type (NST) breast cancer, patients with ILC have worse long-term outcomes. We identified and validated Patient-Derived Xenograft (PDX) models of ILC from 122 breast cancer PDX models based on truncating CDH1 mutations and/or low CDH1 mRNA expression. Eight PDX models were selected for validation using immunohistochemistry for E-cadherin, p120, ER, PR, and HER2. Seven models were confirmed as ILC while one showed mixed NST-ILC features. Confirmed ILC PDX models showed enrichment of truncating CDH1 mutations, significantly lower CDH1 mRNA expression, and predominantly luminal subtypes compared to NST models, consistent with human ILC characteristics. Commonly altered genes included PIK3CA (57%), CDH1 (57%), and TP53 (57%). These validated ILC PDX models provide valuable tools to advance understanding of ILC biology and support development of targeted therapies.