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An Integrated Multiscale Mechanistic Model for Cancer Drug Therapy
Author(s) -
Lei Tang,
Jing Su,
De-Shuang Huang,
Daniel Y. Lee,
King C. Li,
Xiaobo Zhou
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn biomathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2090-7702
DOI - 10.5402/2012/818492
Subject(s) - drug , drug delivery , biodistribution , pharmacokinetics , tumor microenvironment , pharmacology , cancer , distribution (mathematics) , combination therapy , medicine , cancer research , chemistry , in vivo , biology , mathematics , mathematical analysis , microbiology and biotechnology , organic chemistry
In this paper, we established a multiscale mechanistic model for studying drug delivery, biodistribution, and therapeutic effects of cancer drug therapy in order to identify optimal treatment strategies. Due to the specific characteristics of cancer, our proposed model focuses on drug effects on malignant solid tumor and specific internal organs as well as the intratumoral and regional extracellular microenvironments. At the organ level, we quantified drug delivery based on a multicompartmental model. This model will facilitate the analysis and prediction of organ toxicity and provide important pharmacokinetic information with regard to drug clearance rates. For the analysis of intratumoral microenvironment which is directly related to blood drug concentrations and tumor properties, we constructed a drug distribution model using diffusion-convection solute transport to study temporal/spatial variations of drug concentration. With this information, our model incorporates signaling pathways for the analysis of antitumor response with drug combinations at the extracellular level. Moreover, changes in tumor size, cellular proliferation, and apoptosis induced by different drug treatment conditions are studied. Therefore, the proposed multi-scale model could be used to understand drug clinical actions, study drug therapy-antitumor effects, and potentially identify optimal combination drug therapy. Numerical simulations demonstrate the proposed system's effectiveness.

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