From the identification of actionable molecular targets to the generation of faithful neuroblastoma patient-derived preclinical models
-
Published:2024-02-13
Issue:1
Volume:22
Page:
-
ISSN:1479-5876
-
Container-title:Journal of Translational Medicine
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:J Transl Med
Author:
Capasso Mario, Brignole Chiara, Lasorsa Vito A., Bensa Veronica, Cantalupo Sueva, Sebastiani Enrico, Quattrone Alessandro, Ciampi Eleonora, Avitabile Marianna, Sementa Angela R., Mazzocco Katia, Cafferata Barbara, Gaggero Gabriele, Vellone Valerio G., Cilli Michele, Calarco Enzo, Giusto Elena, Perri Patrizia, Aveic Sanja, Fruci Doriana, Tondo Annalisa, Luksch Roberto, Mura Rossella, Rabusin Marco, De Leonardis Francesco, Cellini Monica, Coccia Paola, Iolascon Achille, Corrias Maria V., Conte Massimo, Garaventa Alberto, Amoroso Loredana, Ponzoni MircoORCID, Pastorino Fabio
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Neuroblastoma (NB) represents the most frequent and aggressive form of extracranial solid tumor of infants. Although the overall survival of patients with NB has improved in the last years, more than 50% of high-risk patients still undergo a relapse. Thus, in the era of precision/personalized medicine, the need for high-risk NB patient-specific therapies is urgent.
Methods
Within the PeRsonalizEd Medicine (PREME) program, patient-derived NB tumors and bone marrow (BM)-infiltrating NB cells, derived from either iliac crests or tumor bone lesions, underwent to histological and to flow cytometry immunophenotyping, respectively. BM samples containing a NB cells infiltration from 1 to 50 percent, underwent to a subsequent NB cells enrichment using immune-magnetic manipulation. Then, NB samples were used for the identification of actionable targets and for the generation of 3D/tumor-spheres and Patient-Derived Xenografts (PDX) and Cell PDX (CPDX) preclinical models.
Results
Eighty-four percent of NB-patients showed potentially therapeutically targetable somatic alterations (including point mutations, copy number variations and mRNA over-expression). Sixty-six percent of samples showed alterations, graded as “very high priority”, that are validated to be directly targetable by an approved drug or an investigational agent. A molecular targeted therapy was applied for four patients, while a genetic counseling was suggested to two patients having one pathogenic germline variant in known cancer predisposition genes. Out of eleven samples implanted in mice, five gave rise to (C)PDX, all preserved in a local PDX Bio-bank. Interestingly, comparing all molecular alterations and histological and immunophenotypic features among the original patient’s tumors and PDX/CPDX up to second generation, a high grade of similarity was observed. Notably, also 3D models conserved immunophenotypic features and molecular alterations of the original tumors.
Conclusions
PREME confirms the possibility of identifying targetable genomic alterations in NB, indeed, a molecular targeted therapy was applied to four NB patients. PREME paves the way to the creation of clinically relevant repositories of faithful patient-derived (C)PDX and 3D models, on which testing precision, NB standard-of-care and experimental medicines.
Funder
Ministero della Salute Associazione Italiana per la Lotta al Neuroblastoma Associazione Oncologia Pediatrica e Neuroblastoma ONLUS Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference61 articles.
1. Matthay KK, Maris JM, Schleiermacher G, et al. Neuroblastoma. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2016;2:16078. 2. Bosse KR, Maris JM. Advances in the translational genomics of neuroblastoma: from improving risk stratification and revealing novel biology to identifying actionable genomic alterations. Cancer. 2016;122:20–33. 3. Peifer M, Hertwig F, Roels F, et al. Telomerase activation by genomic rearrangements in high-risk neuroblastoma. Nature. 2015;526:700–4. 4. Lasorsa VA, Cimmino F, Ognibene M, et al. 19p loss is significantly enriched in older age neuroblastoma patients and correlates with poor prognosis. NPJ Genom Med. 2020;5:18. 5. Trigg RM, Turner SD. ALK in neuroblastoma: biological and therapeutic implications. Cancers. 2018;10(4):113. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers10040113.
|
|