Intratumoral drug-releasing microdevices allow in situ high-throughput pharmaco phenotyping in patients with gliomas

Author:

Peruzzi Pierpaolo1ORCID,Dominas Christine2,Fell Geoffrey3ORCID,Bernstock Joshua D.1ORCID,Blitz Sarah4ORCID,Mazzetti Debora1,Zdioruk Mykola1ORCID,Dawood Hassan Y.1ORCID,Triggs Daniel V.1,Ahn Sebastian W.2,Bhagavatula Sharath K.2ORCID,Davidson Shawn M.5ORCID,Tatarova Zuzana2ORCID,Pannell Michael1ORCID,Truman Kyla1ORCID,Ball Anna1ORCID,Gold Maxwell P.6,Pister Veronika6ORCID,Fraenkel Ernest67ORCID,Chiocca E. Antonio1ORCID,Ligon Keith L.8ORCID,Wen Patrick Y.9ORCID,Jonas Oliver2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 60 Fenwood Road, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

2. Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 221 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

3. Department of Data Science, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, 450 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02215, USA.

4. Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

5. Lewis-Sigler Institute of Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.

6. Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

7. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

8. Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

9. Division of Neuro-Oncology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, 450 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

Abstract

The lack of reliable predictive biomarkers to guide effective therapy is a major obstacle to the advancement of therapy for high-grade gliomas, particularly glioblastoma (GBM), one of the few cancers whose prognosis has not improved over the past several decades. With this pilot clinical trial (number NCT04135807), we provide first-in-human evidence that drug-releasing intratumoral microdevices (IMDs) can be safely and effectively used to obtain patient-specific, high-throughput molecular and histopathological drug response profiling. These data can complement other strategies to inform the selection of drugs based on their observed antitumor effect in situ. IMDs are integrated into surgical practice during tumor resection and remain in situ only for the duration of the otherwise standard operation (2 to 3 hours). None of the six enrolled patients experienced adverse events related to the IMD, and the exposed tissue was usable for downstream analysis for 11 out of 12 retrieved specimens. Analysis of the specimens provided preliminary evidence of the robustness of the readout, compatibility with a wide array of techniques for molecular tissue interrogation, and promising similarities with the available observed clinical-radiological responses to temozolomide. From an investigational aspect, the amount of information obtained with IMDs allows characterization of tissue effects of any drugs of interest, within the physiological context of the intact tumor, and without affecting the standard surgical workflow.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

General Medicine

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