Research in the Weis Lab is concentrated in developing and deploying computational modeling and non-invasive imaging methodologies to explore the nature of soft-tissue mechanics in cancer, with an emphasis on driving clinical therapeutic interventions. Research projects focus on the multi-disciplinary study of the multi-scale influences of mechanics in cancer progression and response to therapy, involving the development and validation of imaging-based mathematical modeling approaches that evaluate quantitative parameterization of cancer growth and therapy response properties based on observational imaging measurement data (optical, X-ray computed tomography, and/or magnetic resonance imaging). Utilizing a mathematical modeling framework that incorporates mechanical signaling from the surrounding tissue microenvironment, predictions of the eventual response of cancer to therapy can be made with an overall goal of directing therapeutic intervention.

Highlighted Research Projects

The Weis Lab employs a mixed experimental/computational approach towards modeling and parameterization of cancer, employing tools of imaging, biophysics, and computational modeling to study cancer progression and response to therapy. 

Research spans the length scale of cancer from preclinical in vitro cancer cell and in vivo cancer model systems to translational clinical-based investigations within the scope of three main projects:
 

Multi-scale imaging-based biophysical modeling to predict the response of breast cancer to chemotherapy  

It is clear that tissue mechanics is not only a passive indicator of cancer status, but is also active in shaping the growth and response of tumors. We begin with the hypothesis that interactions between cancer and mechanics at the macroscopic level can be described by a coupled reactive-diffusive mechanics system, where tumor cells grow and diffuse in space depending on their mechanical environment. Rather than use this system to simulate tumor growth de novo, the Weis Lab is interested in leveraging rich non-invasive imaging data sources available to make these models patient-specific. This has led to work developing a mathematical approach to integrate quantitative in vivo imaging data into biomathematical models of tumor growth and diffusion in order to predict eventual response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy based on early measurements during therapy. The combination of quantitative data provided by advanced imaging approaches to initialize and guide a mechanistic understanding provided by mathematical models has demonstrated a compelling strategy for these complex evaluations. The approach represents a novel application of biomechanics coupled tumor growth models to the clinically significant problem of patient-specific non-invasive imaging-derived predictive models of tumor response to therapy. 
Multi-scale imaging-based biophysical modeling to predict the response of breast cancer to chemotherapy

Imaging-based biophysical modeling to differentiate tumor recurrence from radiation necrosis following stereotactic radiosurgery for intracranial metastasis 

Patients with intracranial metastases often undergo stereotactic radiosurgery (e.g. GammaKnife) for local control. Following treatment, some patients develop radiation-induced necrosis, which appears radiographically similar to tumor recurrence on follow-up imaging. Both may appear as an enhancing lesion in contrast-enhanced MR imaging with surrounding fluid abnormality, complicating diagnostic and therapeutic efforts. The Weis Lab has developed a spatiotemporal model of tumor growth to parameterize tumor growth kinetics, based on contrast-enhanced serial MR imaging. Differences between patients with tumor recurrence and radiation-induced necrosis were found when comparing the biophysical model-based parameters, suggesting the potential to non-invasively distinguish between diagnoses in a biophysical model-based image analysis framework.

Imaging-based biophysical modeling to differentiate tumor recurrence from radiation necrosis following stereotactic radiosurgery for intracranial metastasis

Mechanical stiffness as a biomarker to evaluate and predict breast cancer therapeutic response 

Mechanical investigations within the Weis Lab focus on studying cancer from a tissue-level mechanics and mathematical modeling background to explore tissue-level mechanical stiffness imaging biomarkers in breast cancer. The Weis Lab has developed novel computational methodologies to assess tissue-level mechanical elasticity in breast cancer clinical and preclinical models based on anatomical magnetic resonance images collected before and after the application of a quasi-static mechanical compression. In an extension to the methodology, we have also investigated the use of the method in clinical cancer patients using gravitational excitation as a deformation source to drive model-based estimation of mechanical tissue stiffness markers.

Mechanical stiffness as a biomarker to evaluate and predict breast cancer therapeutic response

Recent Publications

Xiao, T.G., Weis, J.A., Gayzik, F.S., Thomas, A., Chiba, A., Gurcan, M.N., Topaloglu, U., Samykutty, A., McNally, L.R. Applying Dynamic Contrast Enhanced MSOT Imaging to Intratumoral Pharmacokinetic Modeling. Photoacoustics. 2018 Jul;11:28-35. 

McKenna, M.T., Weis, J.A., Brock, A., Quaranta, V., Yankeelov, T.E. Precision medicine with imprecise therapy: Computational modeling for chemotherapy in breast cancer. Translational Oncology. 2018 Jun;11(3):732-742. 

McKenna, M.T., Weis, J.A., Quaranta, V., Yankeelov, T.E. Variable Cell Line Pharmacokinetics Contribute to Non-linear Treatment Response in Heterogeneous Cell Populations. Annals of Biomedical Engineering. 2018 Jun;46(6):899-911. 

Griesenauer, R.H., Weis, J.A., Arlinghaus, L.R., Meszoely, I., Miga, M.I. Towards Quantitative Quasi-static elastography with a gravity-induced deformation source for image guided breast surgery. Journal of Medical Imaging. 2018 Jan;5(1):015003. 

Hormuth, D.A., Weis, J.A., Eldridge, S.L., Miga, M.I., Rericha, E., Quaranta, V., Yankeelov, T.E. Biophysical modeling of in vivo glioma growth following whole brain radiotherapy in a murine model of brain cancer. International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics. 2017 Dec 13. pii: S0360-3016(17)34186-X. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2017.12.004. 

Heiselman, J.S., Clements, L.W., Collins, J.A., Weis, J.A., Simpson, A.L., Geevarghese, S.K., Kingham, T.P., Jarnagin, W.R., Miga, M.I. Characterization and correction of intraoperative soft tissue deformation in image-guided laparoscopic liver surgery. Journal of Medical Imaging. 2018 Apr;5(2):021203. 

Hormuth, D.A., Eldridge, S.L., Weis, J.A., Miga, M.I., Yankeelov, T.E. Mechanically coupled reaction-diffusion model to predict glioma growth: Methodological details. Methods in Molecular Biology. 2018;1711:225-241.  

Clements, L.W., Collins, J.A., Weis, J.A., Simpson, A.L., Kingham, T.P., Jarnagin, W.R., Miga, M.I. Deformation Correction for Image Guided Liver Surgery: An Intraoperative Fidelity Assessment. Surgery. 2017 Sep;162(3):537-547. 

Luo, M., Frisken, S.F., Weis, J.A., Clements, L.W., Unadkat, P., Thompson, R.C., Golby, A.J., Miga, M.I. Retrospective study comparing model-based deformation correction to intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging for image-guided neurosurgery. Journal of Medical Imaging. 2017 Jul;4(3):035003. 

McKenna, M.T., Weis, J.A., Barnes, S.L., Tyson, D.R., Miga, M.I., Quaranta, V., Yankeelov, T.E. A predictive mathematical modeling approach for the study of doxorubicin treatment in triple negative breast cancer. Scientific Reports. 2017 Jul 18;7(1):5725.