| Literature DB >> 35508177 |
Shengli Ding1, Carolyn Hsu2, Zhaohui Wang1, Naveen R Natesh3, Rosemary Millen4, Marcos Negrete3, Nicholas Giroux3, Grecia O Rivera3, Anders Dohlman3, Shree Bose3, Tomer Rotstein3, Kassandra Spiller5, Athena Yeung3, Zhiguo Sun3, Chongming Jiang6, Rui Xi3, Benjamin Wilkin5, Peggy M Randon7, Ian Williamson3, Daniel A Nelson5, Daniel Delubac5, Sehwa Oh8, Gabrielle Rupprecht8, James Isaacs8, Jingquan Jia8, Chao Chen6, John Paul Shen9, Scott Kopetz9, Shannon McCall10, Amber Smith5, Nikolche Gjorevski11, Antje-Christine Walz11, Scott Antonia8, Estelle Marrer-Berger11, Hans Clevers12, David Hsu13, Xiling Shen14.
Abstract
Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) and patient-derived organoids (PDOs) have been shown to model clinical response to cancer therapy. However, it remains challenging to use these models to guide timely clinical decisions for cancer patients. Here, we used droplet emulsion microfluidics with temperature control and dead-volume minimization to rapidly generate thousands of micro-organospheres (MOSs) from low-volume patient tissues, which serve as an ideal patient-derived model for clinical precision oncology. A clinical study of recently diagnosed metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) patients using an MOS-based precision oncology pipeline reliably assessed tumor drug response within 14 days, a timeline suitable for guiding treatment decisions in the clinic. Furthermore, MOSs capture original stromal cells and allow T cell penetration, providing a clinical assay for testing immuno-oncology (IO) therapies such as PD-1 blockade, bispecific antibodies, and T cell therapies on patient tumors.Entities:
Keywords: adoptive cell therapy; bispecific antibody; colorectal cancer; droplet microfluidics; immune-oncology; lung cancer; micro-organosphere; precision medicine; precision oncology; tumorsphere
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35508177 PMCID: PMC9177814 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2022.04.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 25.269