TY - EJOU AU - Han, Ye Ri AU - Lee, Sang Bong TI - Preclinical Models of Colorectal Cancer Liver Metastasis: Therapeutic Evaluation and Translational Implications T2 - Oncology Research PY - VL - IS - SN - 1555-3906 AB - Colorectal cancer liver metastasis (CRLM) remains a leading cause of cancer-related mortality, with clinical outcomes limited by biological heterogeneity and inconsistent therapeutic responses. Despite advances in systemic chemotherapy, targeted agents, immunotherapy, and liver-directed interventions, the translation of preclinical efficacy into clinical benefit remains suboptimal, highlighting the need for predictive experimental models. However, therapeutic efficacy in CRLM is highly model-dependent, and discrepancies between preclinical findings and clinical outcomes often arise from differences in biological fidelity across experimental platforms. This review critically examines preclinical platforms used to study CRLM, with emphasis on orthotopic and metastatic models that recapitulate hepatic colonization, tumor–microenvironment interactions, and immune regulation. We evaluate methodological innovations that enhance anatomical fidelity and reproducibility, including tissue adhesive–based implantation and biomaterial-assisted strategies. Importantly, we analyze how different models influence therapeutic assessment across systemic, immune-based, metabolic, and liver-directed treatments, and discuss their ability to predict clinical responses. By integrating insights from experimental studies with key clinical evidence, we delineate the strengths and limitations of current platforms and propose principles for rational model selection to improve translational success in CRLM research. KW - Colorectal cancer liver metastasis (CRLM); orthotopic tumor models; liver-directed therapy; tumor microenvironment; immunotherapy; translational research DO - 10.32604/or.2026.079556