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Patient-Derived Ovarian Cancer Organoids Mimic Clinical Response and Exhibit Heterogeneous Inter- and Intrapatient Drug Responses

Authors :
Wigard P. Kloosterman
Chris J. de Witte
Ronald P. Zweemer
Jose Espejo Valle-Inclan
Nizar Hami
Paul J. van Diest
Kadi Lõhmussaar
Hugo J. Snippert
Edwin Cuppen
Geertruida N. Jonges
Hans Clevers
Oded Kopper
Ellen Stelloo
Petronella O. Witteveen
Celien P.H. Vreuls
Luan Nguyen
Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research
Source :
Cell Reports, 31(11). Cell Press, Cell Reports, Vol 31, Iss 11, Pp 107762-(2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

PurposeThere remains an unmet need for preclinical models to enable personalized therapy for ovarian cancer (OC) patients. Recently, patient-derived organoid (PDO) cultures of patients with OC have been established that faithfully represent the histopathological features and genomic landscape of the patient tumor. In this study, we evaluate the capacity of OC PDOs to predict clinical drug response and functional consequences of tumor heterogeneity.Experimental design36 genomically characterized PDOs from 23 patients with known clinical histories were exposed to chemotherapeutics and targeted drugs.ResultsOC PDOs maintained genomic features of the original tumor lesion and recapitulated patient response to neoadjuvant carboplatin and paclitaxel combination treatment, according to distinct clinical outcomes (histopathological, biochemical and radiological). PDOs displayed inter-as well as intrapatient drug response heterogeneity, which could in part be explained by genetic aberrations. All PDOs were resistant to PARP-inhibitors, in accordance with homologous recombination pathway fidelity and genome-wide mutation context. KRAS, BRAF and NRAS mutation status predicted response to BRAF-inhibitor vemurafenib and pan-HER-inhibitor afatinib, and explained differential response among four PDOs derived from distinct tumor locations of an individual patient. Importantly, PDO drug screening identified sensitivity to at least one drug for the majority of patients (88%).ConclusionsOC PDOs are a valuable preclinical model system that can provide insights in drug response for individual patients with OC, complementary to genetic testing. Generating PDOs of multiple tumor locations can improve clinical decision making and increase our knowledge on genetic and drug response heterogeneity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22111247
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Reports, 31(11). Cell Press, Cell Reports, Vol 31, Iss 11, Pp 107762-(2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....785c038a130b56348add66ed4117993f