Personalized organoid drug testing predicts colorectal cancer treatment response
December 2023
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Australia
Predictive drug testing of patient-derived tumor organoids (PDTOs) holds promise for personalizing treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), but prospective data are limited to chemotherapy regimens with conflicting results. Here the researchers describe a unified framework for PDTO-based predictive testing across standard-of-care chemotherapy and biologic and targeted therapy options. In an Australian community cohort, PDTO predictions based on treatment-naive patients (n = 56) and response rates from first-line mCRC clinical trials achieve 83% accuracy for forecasting responses in patients receiving palliative treatments (18 patients, 29 treatments). Similar assay accuracy is achieved in a prospective study of third-line or later mCRC treatment (n = 30 patients). “Resistant” predictions are associated with inferior progression-free survival; misclassification rates are similar by regimen. Liver metastases are the optimal site for sampling, with testing achievable within 7 weeks for 68.8% cases. These findings indicate that PDTO drug panel testing can provide predictive information for multifarious standard-of-care therapies for mCRC.
Unified framework for patient-derived, tumor-organoid-based predictive testing of standard-of-care therapies in metastatic colorectal cancer
Oliver M. Sieber
Added on: 04-02-2024
[1] https://www.cell.com/cell-reports-medicine/fulltext/S2666-3791(23)00552-9?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS2666379123005529%3Fshowall%3Dtrue[2] https://www.drugtargetreview.com/news/130238/organoid-drug-testing-predicts-bowel-cancer-treatment-response/