The Origin of Patient-Derived Cancer Organoids from Pathologically Undiagnosed Specimen in Patients with Pancreatobiliary Cancers

Author:

Kim Bomi1,Park Jiho2,Na Hee Young1,Park Sinwoo3,Jin Jeonghwa2,Jung Kwangrok1,Lee Jong-chan1,Hwang Jin-Hyeok1,Seo Minseok3,Kim Jaihwan1

Affiliation:

1. Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine

2. Next & Bio Inc

3. Korea University

Abstract

Abstract

Purpose Tissue confirmation of pancreatobiliary cancer is often difficult because of the location of the tumor and structure of the surrounding blood vessels. Patient-derived cancer organoids (PDCOs) reflect the genomic characteristics of individual cancers. Although diverse attempts to construct PDCOs for various pancreatobiliary cancer models are ongoing, no research results have yet confirmed the possibility of performing a precise diagnosis on PDCOs derived from pathologically negative patient samples. Methods We obtained a total of nine samples, including pathologically negative samples, from four patients (three patients with pancreatic cancer and one patient with gallbladder cancer) using different tissue acquisition methods to establish PDCOs (success rate 75%). Results We successfully verified whether the constructed PDCOs could represent the tissues of patients with pancreatobiliary cancer at each multi-omics level using tumor panel sequencing, single-cell RNA sequencing, hematoxylin and eosin, and immunohistochemical staining. PDCOs from pathologically negative samples showed expression patterns of malignant ductal cell-related biomarkers similar to those of other pathologically positive samples. Furthermore, the expression patterns at the single-cell level in PDCO from patients ultimately diagnosed with gallbladder cancer after surgery were different from those in patients with pancreatic cancer. Conclusion Therefore, PDCOs could be used for precision therapy from positive as well as negative samples.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference43 articles.

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5. National Comprehensive Cancer Network Guidelines. Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma, (Version 2, 2023). (2023). https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/category_1

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