Patient-derived organoids for personalized drug screening in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.

Author:

Antonia Ricardo J.1,Toriguchi Kan1,Karelehto Eveliina1,Annuar Dania1,Timmerman Luika2,Tbeileh Noura1,Mattis Aras N.1,Corvera Carlos U.3,Hirose Kenzo3,Nakakura Eric K.3,Donner David B.1,Warren Robert S.1

Affiliation:

1. University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA;

2. UCSF, San Francisco, CA;

3. University of California San Francisco Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, San Francisco, CA;

Abstract

581 Background: Despite standard treatment with gemcitabine and cisplatin, median survival for unresectable Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is < 1 year. Clearly, novel therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. The paucity of targetable mutations in ICC and the as yet unproven benefit of genetically targeted drugs led us to ask whether a reliable clinical benefit may be revealed by patient-specific therapeutic testing in novel models of ICC. Here we describe our ability to establish patient-derived three-dimensional organoid cultures (PDO) that enable individualized identification of active single agents or drug combinations in surrogate models of ICC. Methods: To model patient-specific drug responses, we used the freshly resected ICCs from small samples of single patient tumors to generate PDXs and PDOs, small spheroidal clusters of tumor cells grown in vitro. We have employed a high-throughput drug screening platform using AI-enhanced robotics (Yamaha Motor Corporation) to identify and distribute single, uniformly sized PDOs into 384-well ultra-low adherent plates. This is coupled with a TECAN D300e drug dispenser that rapidly delivers nanoliter volumes of a 34-drug panel, thereby facilitating rapid, reliable drug response analyses. Results: Our data show that PDOs retain characteristic genomic and histological features of the patients’ tumors. Drug responses were specific to each patient tumor, but PDOs from all patients responded to a greater or lesser degree to mTOR inhibition, suggesting that this pathway is important in ICC. The responses of PDO to the mTOR inhibitor Sapanisertib (INK128), was recapitulated in the same patient’s PDX. Further, INK128 was synergistic with gemcitabine in patient 970 PDOs as well as in vivo in PDX also from patient 970. Conclusions: As it is believed that PDX can predict patient responses to drugs, our results suggest that PDO may also predict patient drug responses. The establishment of PDO may allow economical patient-specific, high throughput drug screens that could ultimately inform clinical practice. [Table: see text]

Funder

Littlefield FoundationPharmaceutical/Biotech Company

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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