| Literature DB >> 33816288 |
Maikel Verduin1, Ann Hoeben2, Dirk De Ruysscher1, Marc Vooijs1.
Abstract
Patient-derived cancer organoids have taken a prominent role in pre-clinical and translational research and have been generated for most common solid tumors. Cancer organoids have been shown to retain key genetic and phenotypic characteristics of their tissue of origin, tumor subtype and maintain intratumoral heterogeneity and therefore have the potential to be used as predictors for individualized treatment response. In this review, we highlight studies that have used cancer organoids to compare the efficacy of standard-of-care and targeted combination treatments with clinical patient response. Furthermore, we review studies using cancer organoids to identify new anti-cancer treatments using drug screening. Finally, we discuss the current limitations and improvements needed to understand the full potential of cancer organoids as avatars for clinical management of cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; organoids; patient-derived; precision medicine; treatment prediction; treatment response
Year: 2021 PMID: 33816288 PMCID: PMC8012903 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.641980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Summary of study characteristics and main results.
| Study | Cancer type | Organoid establishment success rate (%) | # of organoid lines used for treatment experiments | Multiple organoid lines per patient | Matched healthy tissue organoids | Standard-of-care testing | Clinical comparison | Drug screen | Outcomes regarding prediction of clinical treatment response | |
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| van de Wetering M. et al. ( | Colorectal cancer | 90% | 19 | Drug screen on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Koppens M. et al. ( | Colon cancer | not reported | 2 | Efficacy of EZH2 inhibition in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Verissimo CS. et al. ( | RAS mutant colorectal cancer | n.a. | 2 | Organoid response towards EGFR-RAS-ERK targeting in relation to KRAS mutation status. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Buzzelli JN. et al. ( | Colorectal cancer liver metastases | 76.5% | 3 | Efficacy of standard-of-care chemotherapy in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Vlachogiannis G. et al. ( | Metastatic gastrointestinal tumors | not reported | 21 | Sensitivity 100%, specificity 93%, PPV 88%, NPV 100% for organoids in forecasting clinical response to targeted agents or chemotherapeutics. | ||||||
| Gao M. et al. ( | Gastric cancer | not reported | 2 (from 1 patient) | Testing of standard-of-care chemotherapeutics. Descriptive clinical comparison (N=1) showed lowest IC50 value for 5-FU (out of 4 chemotherapeutics tested) and clinical complete response after 5-FU/RTx treatment. No testing for contribution of RTx to clinical effect. | ||||||
| Li X. et al. ( | Esophageal adenocarcinoma | 31% | 9 | Drug screen on organoids. Descriptive comparison showing lack of chemotherapy sensitivity in most organoid cultures which resembled the poor clinical response observed. | ||||||
| Yan HHN. et al. ( | Gastric cancer | 50% (cancer), 100% (healthy) | 9 (from 7 patients) | Drug screen on organoids. Descriptive comparison showing lack of organoid response to 5-FU in a patient that showed progressive disease upon 5-FU. Two other patients showed a clinical response to 5-FU/cisplatin which was resembled in the organoids. | ||||||
| Votanopoulos KI. et al. ( | Appendiceal cancer | 75% | 9 | Chemosensitivity testing of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Li J. et al. ( | Gastric cancer (ascites-derived) | 92% | 7 | Drug screening of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Schumacher D. et al. ( | Colorectal cancer | not reported | 38 | Efficacy of EGFR-targeted therapy and its downstream targets (MEK and mTOR) in relation to KRAS mutation status in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Seidlitz T. et al. ( | Gastric cancer | not reported | 4 | Drug testing of organoids (targeting HER2, c-KIT or CDK4/6). No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Ubink I. et al. ( | Colorectal peritoneal metastases | Not reported | 5 | Sensitivity to HIPEC chemotherapy and efficacy of addition of ATR inhibitor. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Pasch CA. et al. ( | Multiple types of cancer (treatment only on (m)CRC) | 76% | 5 | Descriptive clinical comparison (N=1). Clinical response to FOLFOX in a patient of which the organoid showed an intermediate response towards 5-FU/oxaliplatin treatment. | ||||||
| Steele NG. et al. ( | Gastric cancer | not reported | 6 | Drug screening of organoids. Descriptive clinical comparison (N=2) showing a similar response in the organoid for one patient but not in the other. | ||||||
| Ganesh K. et al. ( | Rectal cancer | 77% | 21 | Drug screening of organoids. Clinical comparison for chemotherapy (N=7) showing a correlation of AUC for both 5-FU and FOLFOX with progression-free survival of the corresponding patient (r=0.86, p=0.024). Descriptive comparison of radiosensitivity (N=7) showing organoid responds corresponds with clinical radiotherapy response. | ||||||
| Ooft SN. et al. ( | Metastatic colorectal cancer | 63% | Varies per treatment | Prediction of response to irinotecan monotherapy (N=10): accuracy of classifier 80%. Prediction of response to 5-FU/irinotecan combination therapy (N=12): 83.3% correctly classified. Prediction of response to 5-FU-oxaliplatin (N=16): no correlation with clinical response. | ||||||
| Costales-Carrera A. et al. ( | Colon cancer | not reported | 3 | Efficacy of plocabulin in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Yao Y. et al. ( | Locally advanced rectal cancer | 85.7% | 80 | High correlation between organoid response and clinical outcomes for prediction of neoadjuvant chemoradiation efficacy: AUC 88.20% (76.46-98.67%), accuracy 84.43% (72.40-93.75%), sensitivity 78.01% (55.56-95%), specificity 91.97% (77.78-100%). | ||||||
| Narasimhan V. et al. ( | Colorectal peritoneal metastases | 68% | 15 | Drug screening of organoids. Descriptive clinical comparison (N=3) in which drug treatment was selected based on organoid sensitivity which was successful for 1 patient. | ||||||
| Zerp SF. et al. ( | Colorectal cancer | not reported | 3 | Efficacy of APG-880 as a radiosensitizer in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Derouet MF. et al. ( | Esophageal adenocarcinoma | 57.2% | 16 | Descriptive clinical comparison (N=4) showing an overlap between the organoid and tumor response. | ||||||
| Arena S. et al. ( | Colorectal cancer | not reported | 5 | Drug testing on organoids. Descriptive clinical comparison (N=3) which corresponded with organoid sensitivity. | ||||||
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| Huang L. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | not reported | 5 | Drug screen of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Broutier L. et al. ( | Liver cancer | 44% | 6 | Drug sensitivity testing of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Nuciforo S. et al. ( | Hepatocellular carcinoma | 26% | 12 | Efficacy of sorafenib on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Tiriac ML. 2018 ( | Pancreatic cancer | 75% | 66 | Descriptive comparison of organoid response towards clinical response. For one patient retrospective clinical data paralleled the chemosensitivity profile of the organoid. | ||||||
| Li L. et al. ( | Liver cancer | not reported | 27 (from 5 patients) | Drug screen of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Hennig A. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | 71% | 10 | Efficacy of standard-of-care chemotherapy stratified for KRT81 status. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Bian B. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | not reported | 24 | Efficacy of BET-inhibitor treatment on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Driehuis E. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | 62% | 24 | Drug screen on organoids. Descriptive comparison towards clinical response (N=4) showing an overall correlation between organoid and clinical response. | ||||||
| Ponz-Sarvise M. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | not reported | 2 | Drug sensitivity testing of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Castven D. et al. ( | Liver cancer | 11% | 5 | Testing efficacy of targeted agents based on mutational variants in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Sharick JT. et al. ( | Pancreatic and Breast cancer | 64% (for pancreatic cancer), 54% (for breast cancer) | 7 (pancreas), 11 (breast) | Using metabolic heterogeneity to predict treatment response in pancreatic cancer organoids (N=7). Three patients were classified as predicted non-responders and all showed tumor recurrence within one year whereas four patients that were classified as predicted responders all remained free of tumor recurrence for more than one year. | ||||||
| Seppälä TT. et al. ( | Pancreatic cancer | 77% | 13 | Pharmacotyping of organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Saltsman J. et al. ( | Hepatoblastoma | not reported | 1 | Drug testing on normal liver and tumor organoid from one patient. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Liu J. et al. ( | Liver cancer | not reported | 4 | Effect of co-culture system with cancer-associated fibroblasts on drug sensitivity in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
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| Gao D. et al., 2014 ( | Metastatic prostate cancer or CTCs | 15-20% | 6 | Sensitivity to androgen receptor and PI3K inhibitors in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Girda E. et al. ( | Endometrial cancer | 100% | 14 (varies per drug) | Drug testing on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Lee SH. et al. ( | Bladder cancer | 70% | 11 | Drug screen of organoids and comparison to in vivo (mice) response. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Puca L. et al. ( | Prostate cancer | 16% | 6 | Drug screening on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Kopper O. et al. ( | Ovarian cancer | 65% | 21 | Descriptive clinical comparison: organoids derived from clinical resistant recurrent disease were more resistant compared to the clinically sensitive primary disease counterpart (N=1). Drug screen of organoids and comparison to in vivo (mice) response. | ||||||
| Boretto M. et al. ( | Endometrial cancer | 20% | 5 | Drug response to standard-of-care chemotherapeutics. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Mullenders J. et al. ( | Bladder cancer | 57.9% | 3 | Drug response to standard-of-care chemotherapeutics. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Calandrini C. et al. ( | Childhood kidney cancer | 100% for healthy tissue, 75% for Wilms tumor, 100% for MRTK, 75% for RCC. Unsuccessful for rare kidney tumor types | 4 | Drug screen of cancer and healthy tissue organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| de Witte C.J. et al. ( | Ovarian cancer | not reported | 36 | Drug screening on organoids. Organoid drug response to carboplatin+paclitaxel treatment showed significant correlation with clinical response (N=7, P<0.01). PDOs generated at interval debulking recapitulated the clinical response to first-line carboplatin and paclitaxel combination treatment for histopathological (p = 5.821e 05), biochemical (p = 0.0004), and radiological (p = 0.0092) outcomes. | ||||||
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| Hubert CG. et al. ( | Glioblastoma | not reported | 1 | Identification of radioresistant cells in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Saengwimol D. et al. ( | Retinoblastoma | 83% | 1 | Effects of standard-of-care chemotherapeutics. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Scognamiglio G. et al. ( | Chordoma | not reported | 3 | Efficacy study of nivolumab. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Loong HF. et al. ( | Glioblastoma | n.a. | 1 | Prospective identification of everolimus as treatment option using organoids showing subsequent partial clinical response. | ||||||
| Chadwick M. et al. ( | Glioblastoma | not reported | 4 | Drug screen on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
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| Sachs N. et al. ( | Breast cancer | >80% | 28 | Drug screening of organoids and comparison to in vivo response in mice. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Li X. et al. ( | Breast cancer | n.a. | 1 | Case-report for drug screening on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
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| Sachs N. 2019 ( | NSCLC | 28% | 4 | Response to multiple chemotherapeutics and TKI’s. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Kim M. et al. ( | Lung cancer | 87% | 5 | Response to docetaxel, olaparib, erlotinib and crizotinib. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Chen J. et al. ( | NSCLC | not reported | 7 | Response to chemotherapeutics and targeted agents in organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Li Z. et al. ( | NSCLC | 80% | 12 | Drug screen on organoids. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
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| Tanaka N. et al. ( | Head-and-neck cancer | 37.2% | 4 | Response to cisplatin and docetaxel. No clinical comparison. | ||||||
| Driehuis E. et al. ( | HNSCC | 65% | 13 | Descriptive comparison of response to radiotherapy (N=7). Organoid response for 6 patients was similar to the observed clinical response. Healthy organoids were not subjected to treatment. | ||||||
| Driehuis E. et al. ( | HNSCC | n.a. | 8 | Efficacy of EGFR-targeted photodynamic therapy. No clinical comparison. | ||||||