Arcieri Martina, Capezzali Eleonora, Restaino Stefano, Pregnolato Sara, Mariuzzi Laura, Mangogna Alessandro, Orsaria Maria, Tulisso Angelica, Tonon Silvia, De Martino Maria, Isola Miriam, Driul Lorenza, Pucillo Carlo, Scambia Giovanni, Frossi Barbara, Vizzielli Giuseppe
Clinic of Obstetrics and Gynecology, "Santa Maria Della Misericordia" University Hospital, Azienda Sanitaria Universitaria Friuli Centrale, Udine, Italy.
Department of Medicine (DMED), University of Udine, Udine, Italy.
Cancer Rep (Hoboken). 2025 Jun;8(6):e70242. doi: 10.1002/cnr2.70242.
Ovarian cancer (OC) is one of the most aggressive tumors requiring new therapeutic approaches. Immunotherapy represents an opportunity, but to date, OC patients do not appear to benefit from current protocols. A better understanding of the composition of the tumor microenvironment (TME), especially in its immune components, could unveil mechanisms of immune suppression in a useful way to predict response to therapies and develop new therapeutic approaches.
The MICO (tumor MICroenvironment of Ovarian cancer) study is a single-center observational study. Starting from peritoneal biopsy of high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC), the purpose of the MICO study is to generate tumor patient-derived organoid (PDOs) cultures and evaluate the concordance between in vitro platinum-based chemotherapy sensitivity and in vivo sensitivity. Simultaneously, we will characterize through multiparameter cytofluorimetric analysis the composition of the OC TME, focusing on B lymphocytes and mast cells whose roles in ovarian cancer remain controversial and underinvestigated. Furthermore, patients experiencing recurrence will be longitudinally followed to monitor changes in the TME composition and the responsiveness of PDOs to in vitro stimulation with drugs.
The association between the composition of the TME, the reactivity of the PDOs, and patients' disease progression will be analyzed to identify whether specific subpopulations of tumor-infiltrating immune cells could be predictive factors of the disease outcomes. The comparison of molecular profiles, in vitro response to drugs, and clinical-pathological data will allow the definition of a pattern capable of predicting the response of the primary tumor for the identification of those patients who may benefit from specific treatment.
The results of our study could help to better understand the OC behavior, may have implications for the development of effective immunotherapy and targeted pharmacological therapies for epithelial OC in a personalized medicine perspective. This will be a monocentric trial with an involvement of only 43 patients, so further studies will need to confirm our results.
The clinical trial has been registered at Clinical-Trials.gov with the identifier NCT06272240 on 02/14/2024.
卵巢癌(OC)是最具侵袭性的肿瘤之一,需要新的治疗方法。免疫疗法带来了契机,但迄今为止,OC患者似乎并未从当前方案中获益。更好地了解肿瘤微环境(TME)的组成,尤其是其免疫成分,可能会以一种有用的方式揭示免疫抑制机制,从而预测对治疗的反应并开发新的治疗方法。
MICO(卵巢癌肿瘤微环境)研究是一项单中心观察性研究。从高级别浆液性卵巢癌(HGSOC)的腹膜活检开始,MICO研究的目的是建立肿瘤患者来源的类器官(PDO)培养物,并评估体外铂类化疗敏感性与体内敏感性之间的一致性。同时,我们将通过多参数细胞荧光分析来表征OC TME的组成,重点关注B淋巴细胞和肥大细胞,它们在卵巢癌中的作用仍存在争议且研究不足。此外,将对复发患者进行纵向随访,以监测TME组成的变化以及PDO对药物体外刺激的反应性。
将分析TME组成、PDO反应性与患者疾病进展之间的关联,以确定肿瘤浸润免疫细胞的特定亚群是否可能是疾病结局的预测因素。分子谱、体外药物反应与临床病理数据的比较将有助于定义一种能够预测原发性肿瘤反应的模式,以识别那些可能从特定治疗中获益的患者。
我们的研究结果可能有助于更好地理解OC的行为,从个性化医疗的角度来看,可能对上皮性OC的有效免疫疗法和靶向药物疗法的开发具有启示意义。这将是一项仅涉及43名患者的单中心试验,因此需要进一步研究来证实我们的结果。
该临床试验已于2024年2月14日在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册,标识符为NCT06272240。