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Development of drug resistance in a murine mammary tumour

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Abstract

The development of resistance to melphalan, cis-platinum and cyclophosphamide has been examined in the MT murine mammary carcinoma. A gradual decrease in therapeutic response was detected using growth delay and clonogenic cell survival during repeated drug treatment. A slow rate of resistance development, a gradual change in the slope of the dose-survival curves and the inability of 180 mg kg-1 cyclophosphamide to bring about a reduction in tumour response at a faster rate than 60 mg kg-1 cyclophosphamide suggest that resistance development was not due to the selection of a pre-existing highly drug resistant sub-population of tumour cells. Partial drug-resistance is proposed as one possible reason for the apparent inconsistency between these data and existing models of drug-resistance development. The drug-resistant lines were characterized for karyotype, DNA content and cell volume, but only the cyclophosphamide-resistant line showed any significant difference from the wild-type tumour. Cross-resistance studies revealed some inconsistencies with previous reports. Also, resistance to cyclophosphamide developed more quickly in the line which was resistant to melphalan, than in the wild-type tumour, despite the initial appearance of little cross-resistance. This increased rate of resistance development may be important in salvage chemotherapy.

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McMillan, T., Stephens, T. & Steel, G. Development of drug resistance in a murine mammary tumour. Br J Cancer 52, 823–832 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1985.265

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1985.265

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