Nikeghbal Parisa, Zamanian Dorsa, Burke Danielle, Steinkamp Mara P
bioRxiv. 2025 May 2:2024.06.28.601283. doi: 10.1101/2024.06.28.601283.
Ovarian cancer (OC) remains the deadliest gynecological cancer, primarily due to late-stage diagnosis and high rates of chemotherapy resistance and recurrence. Lack of representative preclinical models complicate the challenges of discovering effective therapies, especially for platinum-resistant OC. Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models maintain the genetic characteristics of the original tumor and are ideal for testing candidate therapies , but their high cost limits their feasibility for high-throughput drug screening. Organoid models mimic the tumor's 3D structure and preserve intra-tumoral heterogeneity. While organoids established directly from primary patient tumors are the optimal model for personalized drug response studies, the supply of primary tissue is often limited. Patient-derived xenograft tumors can be passaged in mice and provide a renewable source of cancer cells for organoids. This study aimed to determine if PDX-derived organoids (PDXOs) can reflect patient responses to chemotherapy similarly to primary patient-derived organoids (PDOs).
3D tumor organoid cultures were established from paired primary OC and PDX samples. Organoid viability after 72-hour treatment with paclitaxel (PTX), carboplatin (CBDCA), or their combination was compared between organoids derived directly from the patient or from the PDX models. The drug responses of PDXOs and PDOs were then compared to defined patient clinical responses: platinum-sensitive (initial response to standard platinum/taxol therapy lasting >6 months post-treatment), platinum-resistant (initial response to standard chemotherapy lasting < 6 months), or platinum-refractory (no initial response to standard chemotherapy).
In drug response assays, PDXOs and PDOs demonstrated similar sensitivity to standard chemotherapy and also reliably reflected patient responses based on the clinical designation of platinum sensitivity. While organoids derived from the ascites were smaller with a denser morphology, their drug response mirrored that of the organoids derived from solid tumor. Platinum-sensitive cases exhibited significant reductions (around 50% reduction) in organoid viability when treated with carboplatin, paclitaxel, or their combination. Platinum-resistant or refractory organoids showed little to no reduction in viability with carboplatin or paclitaxel monotherapy or the combination. Organoids derived from one platinum-resistant case did show a small but significant reduction in viability with single-agent paclitaxel, suggesting that organoid models might predict response to second-line paclitaxel therapy.
This study demonstrates that PDXOs respond to drugs similarly to PDOs and confirms that both models effectively mirror patient response to standard chemotherapy. This highlights the potential of PDXOs as renewable models for screening novel therapies and developing personalized strategies in OC.
Ovarian cancer (OC) remains the most lethal gynecological cancer, largely due to its late diagnosis and resistance to chemotherapy. In order to identify novel therapies to treat ovarian cancer, we need better models that represent the genetic heterogeneity of the patient population. This study evaluates patient-derived organoid models established either directly from patient samples (PDOs) or from patient samples that were first passaged in mice and are referred to as patient-derived xenograft organoids (PDXOs). For each patient, organoid response to standard chemotherapy based on organoid viability assays was compared to the patient's clinical designation of platinum sensitivity, which is categorized as platinum-sensitive, platinum-resistant, or platinum-refractory based on their response to standard chemotherapy. We demonstrated that both PDOs and PDXOs accurately reflect the patient's clinical designation, suggesting their utility as effective models for testing new therapies and personalizing treatment. Importantly, by providing a renewable source of patient-derived cells, PDXOs extend the utility of each sample, making organoids essential tools for developing and refining personalized treatment strategies in oncology.
卵巢癌(OC)仍然是最致命的妇科癌症,主要原因是诊断时已处于晚期,且化疗耐药和复发率高。缺乏具有代表性的临床前模型使发现有效疗法面临挑战,尤其是对于铂耐药性OC。患者来源的异种移植(PDX)模型保留了原始肿瘤的遗传特征,是测试候选疗法的理想选择,但成本高昂限制了其在高通量药物筛选中的可行性。类器官模型模仿肿瘤的三维结构并保留肿瘤内的异质性。虽然直接从原发性患者肿瘤建立的类器官是个性化药物反应研究的最佳模型,但原发性组织的供应往往有限。患者来源的异种移植肿瘤可在小鼠体内传代,为类器官提供可再生的癌细胞来源。本研究旨在确定PDX来源的类器官(PDXO)是否能与原发性患者来源的类器官(PDO)一样反映患者对化疗的反应。
从配对的原发性OC和PDX样本建立三维肿瘤类器官培养物。比较直接从患者或PDX模型获得的类器官在接受紫杉醇(PTX)、卡铂(CBDCA)或其联合治疗72小时后的类器官活力。然后将PDXO和PDO的药物反应与确定的患者临床反应进行比较:铂敏感(对标准铂/紫杉醇治疗的初始反应持续>6个月)、铂耐药(对标准化疗的初始反应持续<6个月)或铂难治(对标准化疗无初始反应)。
在药物反应试验中,PDXO和PDO对标准化疗表现出相似的敏感性,并且还根据铂敏感性的临床分类可靠地反映了患者的反应。虽然从腹水中获得的类器官较小且形态更致密,但其药物反应与从实体瘤中获得的类器官相似。铂敏感病例在接受卡铂、紫杉醇或其联合治疗时,类器官活力显著降低(约降低50%)。铂耐药或难治性类器官在接受卡铂或紫杉醇单药治疗或联合治疗时,活力几乎没有降低或没有降低。来自一例铂耐药病例的类器官在用单药紫杉醇治疗时确实显示出活力有小但显著的降低,这表明类器官模型可能预测对二线紫杉醇治疗的反应。
本研究表明,PDXO与PDO对药物的反应相似,并证实这两种模型均能有效反映患者对标准化疗的反应。这突出了PDXO作为可再生模型在筛选新疗法和制定OC个性化策略方面的潜力。
卵巢癌(OC)仍然是最致命的妇科癌症,很大程度上是由于其诊断较晚且对化疗耐药。为了确定治疗卵巢癌的新疗法,我们需要更好地代表患者群体遗传异质性的模型。本研究评估了直接从患者样本(PDO)或首先在小鼠体内传代的患者样本(称为患者来源的异种移植类器官,PDXO)建立的患者来源的类器官模型。对于每位患者,根据类器官活力测定将类器官对标准化疗的反应与患者的铂敏感性临床分类进行比较,铂敏感性根据其对标准化疗的反应分为铂敏感、铂耐药或铂难治。我们证明,PDO和PDXO均准确反映患者的临床分类,表明它们作为测试新疗法和个性化治疗的有效模型具有实用性。重要的是,通过提供可再生的患者来源细胞,PDXO扩展了每个样本的用途,使类器官成为肿瘤学中开发和完善个性化治疗策略的重要工具。