| Literature DB >> 35884982 |
Hélène Lê1,2, Joseph Seitlinger1,3, Véronique Lindner1,3, Anne Olland1,3, Pierre-Emmanuel Falcoz1,3, Nadia Benkirane-Jessel1,3, Eric Quéméneur2.
Abstract
Synthetic 3D multicellular systems derived from patient tumors, or tumoroids, have been developed to complete the cancer research arsenal and overcome the limits of current preclinical models. They aim to represent the molecular and structural heterogeneity of the tumor micro-environment, and its complex network of interactions, with greater accuracy. They are more predictive of clinical outcomes, of adverse events, and of resistance mechanisms. Thus, they increase the success rate of drug development, and help clinicians in their decision-making process. Lung cancer remains amongst the deadliest of diseases, and still requires intensive research. In this review, we analyze the merits and drawbacks of the current preclinical models used in lung cancer research, and the position of tumoroids. The introduction of immune cells and healthy regulatory cells in autologous tumoroid models has enabled their application to most recent therapeutic concepts. The possibility of deriving tumoroids from primary tumors within reasonable time has opened a direct approach to patient-specific features, supporting their future role in precision medicine.Entities:
Keywords: microfluidic; non-small-cell lung cancer; preclinical models; tumoroids
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884982 PMCID: PMC9312903 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10071677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1The variety of applications for tumoroids and organoids models. Directly derived from patient biopsy or surgery, synthetic tumor models can be used to study tumorigenesis, tumor growth, and interactions with the normal tissues. The drug discovery process should benefit from higher predictivity from these models than current preclinical models. The combination with microfluidic systems allows for better mimicry of the tumor dynamics and makes these tumor models suitable with high throughput/high content bioassays. Created with BioRender.com.
Advantages and limits of the main preclinical lung cancer models.
| Technologies | Advantages | Limits | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Cancer cell lines | Pure population of tumor cells |
Clonal cells poorly reflect the patients’ primary tissue Genomic instability Absence of stromal, endothelial, and immune cells | [ |
|
| PDXs | Closer to patients’ primary tissues |
Genetic heterogeneity and epigenomic instability Lack of TME components Immunodeficiency Variable implantation, instability | [ |
| Syngeneic models | Functional immune system |
Poor clinical prediction Tedious process | [ | |
| GEMMs | Functional immune system |
Long process Low malignancy potential because of the long latency period | [ | |
Current lung organoid/tumoroid models.
| Primary Tumor Histology, (Mutations) * | Technology Name | Culture Time | Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NS | Patient-derived tumor spheroid (PDS) | 120 days | Mechanistic studies | [ |
| ADK, SCC, LCC | Lung cancer organoids | >1 year | Drug screening | [ |
| ADK, SCC, LCC | Patient-derived lung cancer organoids | >6 months | Patient-specific drugs screening | [ |
| ADK, SCC | NSCLC organoids | 3 months | Drug screening | [ |
| ADK, SCC NSCLC (EGFR, KRAS) | Patient-derived organoids models (PDOs) | NS | Genomic analyses | [ |
| NSCLC (EGFR, KRAS) | Patient lung-derived tumoroids (PLDTs) | NS | Drug screening | [ |
| ADK, SCC, LCC, NSCLC | Lung cancer organoids | NS | Personalized medicine | [ |
| NS | Patient-derived organoids (PDOs) | 2–3 months | Drug screening | [ |
| ADK | Lung ADK (LADC)-derived organoid model | >50–200 days | Transcriptome analysis | [ |
| ADK and SCC | Lung cancer organoids | 6 days | Drug screening | [ |
| ADK and SCC primary or metastatic NSCLC | Patient-derived tumoroids (PDTs) | >13 months | Generation of cell lines | [ |
| ADK | Patient-derived tumoroids (PDTs) | 4 days | Mimic the tumor vascular network | [ |
* ADK: adenocarcinoma; SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; LCC: large cell carcinoma, NS: non specified.
Figure 2Example of NSCLC tumoroid model and its applications. Tumor samples were obtained from NHC (Nouvel Hôpital Civil) in Strasbourg, France. Washing and enzymatic digestion were performed within 1–2 h after resection. Tumoral cells were centrifuged, and other cell types, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) were added to reconstitute the TME complexity. Tumoroids were grown in a final volume of 200 μL in ultra-low attachment 96-well plates, forming after 5 days of incubation at 37 °C. This tumoroid model is aimed at being inserted into a microfluidic chip to overcome the limit of the static 3D organoid model. Drug toxicity and efficacy assessment are facilitated to select the best treatment opportunity for each individual patient. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 3Immunohistochemical features of a patient-derived tumoroid and matched tissue. Patient 2OT 360 suffered from an advanced adenocarcinoma. Scale bar 100 µm.
Figure 4Functional interactions between tumor cells and the main cells in the lung tumor micro-environment. Lung tumor micro-environment is defined by complex interactions between several actors including CAFs, endothelial cells and immune cells. CAFs promote an immunosuppressive microenvironment by interacting with Treg cells, and tumorigenesis by releasing inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 and TGF-β. Tumorigenesis is also promoted by neutrophils with the release of inflammatory cytokines including IL-1β. On the other hand, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, B cells and NK cells coordinate an antitumor response. Drawing created using the Tayasui Sketches application.
ICIs approved and on ongoing clinical evaluation for advanced NSCLC patients.
| Drug | Target(S) | Indications | FDA Approval | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pembrolizumab | PD-1 |
First-line systemic therapy for NSCLC patients with PD-L1 expression > 50% and without EGFR or ALK mutations Second-line advanced stage NSCLC after progression on first-line chemotherapy (PD-L1 > 1%) First-line for metastatic non-squamous NSCLC in combination with pemetrexed and carboplatin (regardless of PD-L1 expression) | 2015 | [ |
| Nivolumab | PD-1 |
Advanced squamous and non-squamous NSCLC as second-line systemic therapy after progression on first-line chemotherapy (regardless of PD-L1 expression) First-line treatment for metastatic or recurrent NSCLC without EGFR or ALK mutations, in combination with Ipilimumab YERVOY® (anti CTLA-4) and 2 cycles of platinum-doublet chemotherapy | 2015 | [ |
| Durvalumab | PD-L1 | Unresectable stage III NSCLC patients that have not progressed after chemoradiation therapy | 2018 | [ |
| Atezolizumab | PD-L1 | First-line treatment in metastatic NSCLC with PD-L1 > 50% | 2020 | [ |
| Cemiplimab-rwlcLIBTAYO® | PD-1 | First-line treatment in locally or metastatic advanced stage NSCLC (no eligible to surgical resection nor definitive chemoradiation) with PD-L1 > 50% | 2021 | [ |
Summary of integrative microfluidics systems in NSCLC.
| Microfluidic Model | Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Microfluidic device for lung cancer organoids | Drug screening Predictive modelling of chemotherapy response (cisplatin and etoposide) Presence of chemo-resistant cells in the inner core of organoids | [ |
| Lung carcinoma spheroid based microfluidic platform | Drug assessment of panaxatriol in fluidic conditions with a perfusion function on cancer cells and healthy cells | [ |
| Human organ chip model | Recapitulation of human cancer with its specific microenvironment TKI resistance is modelled on a lung-cancer-on-a-chip with breathing motions | [ |
| Lung cancer cell spheroids in a perfused microfluidic platform | Cell viability assessment of chemotherapeutical drug | [ |
| Detection of cytokeratin 19 fragments | Biomarkers study of diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| Chip for study of lung cancer brain metastasis | Study metastasis | [ |
Figure 5Integrative microfluidics. A combination of tumoroid and microfluidic technologies into a chip format provides access to more relevant, and multipurpose models. Created with BioRender.com.