Modeling Tumor Microenvironment Complexity In Vitro: Spheroids as Physiologically Relevant Tumor Models and Strategies for Their Analysis

体外模拟肿瘤微环境复杂性:球状体作为生理相关的肿瘤模型及其分析策略

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Abstract

Drug delivery to solid tumors is challenged by multiple physiological barriers arising from the tumor microenvironment, including dense extracellular matrix, cellular heterogeneity, hypoxic gradients, and elevated interstitial fluid pressure. These features hinder the uniform distribution and accumulation of therapeutics, reducing treatment efficacy. Despite their widespread use, conventional two-dimensional monolayer cultures fail to reproduce these complexities, contributing to the poor translational predictability of many preclinical candidates. Three-dimensional multicellular tumor spheroids have emerged as more representative in vitro models that capture essential features of tumor architecture, stromal interactions, and microenvironmental resistance mechanisms. Spheroids exhibit spatially organized regions of proliferation, quiescence, and hypoxia, and can incorporate non-tumor cells to mimic tumor-stroma crosstalk. Advances in spheroid analysis now enable detailed evaluation of drug penetration, cellular migration, cytotoxic response, and molecular gradients using techniques such as optical and confocal imaging, large-particle flow cytometry, biochemical viability assays, and microfluidic integration. By combining physiological relevance with analytical accessibility, spheroid models support mechanistic studies of drug transport and efficacy under tumor-like conditions. Their adoption into routine preclinical workflows has the potential to improve translational accuracy while reducing reliance on animal models.

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