| Literature DB >> 34610309 |
Max A Stockslager1, Seth Malinowski2, Mehdi Touat3, Jennifer C Yoon4, Jack Geduldig2, Mahnoor Mirza4, Annette S Kim5, Patrick Y Wen6, Kin-Hoe Chow7, Keith L Ligon8, Scott R Manalis9.
Abstract
Functional precision medicine aims to match individual cancer patients to optimal treatment through ex vivo drug susceptibility testing on patient-derived cells. However, few functional diagnostic assays have been validated against patient outcomes at scale because of limitations of such assays. Here, we describe a high-throughput assay that detects subtle changes in the mass of individual drug-treated cancer cells as a surrogate biomarker for patient treatment response. To validate this approach, we determined ex vivo response to temozolomide in a retrospective cohort of 69 glioblastoma patient-derived neurosphere models with matched patient survival and genomics. Temozolomide-induced changes in cell mass distributions predict patient overall survival similarly to O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter methylation and may aid in predictions in gliomas with mismatch-repair variants of unknown significance, where MGMT is not predictive. Our findings suggest cell mass is a promising functional biomarker for cancers and drugs that lack genomic biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell mass; cell size; functional drug susceptibility testing; glioblastoma
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34610309 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423