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American Association for Cancer Research, Cancer Research, 16_Supplement(80), p. 3913-3913, 2020

DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2020-3913

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Abstract 3913: Evaluation of patient-derived cell lines and cancer organoids for the prediction of drug responses in patient-derived xenograft models

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Abstract Cancer organoids are heterogeneous 3D cellular clusters with complexities that mimic some characteristics of tumors in situ. Thus, assays performed with cancer organoids might enable better predictions of in vivo drug responses than those performed with cell monolayers. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is developing a national repository of Patient-Derived (PD) models comprised of clinically annotated and molecularly characterized PD xenografts (PDXs), PD tumor cell lines (PDCs), and PD cancer organoids (PDOrgs) (https://pdmr.cancer.gov/). We evaluated the therapeutic activity of a panel of FDA-approved and investigational anticancer agents, including carboplatin, gemcitabine, paclitaxel, SN38, 5-FU, adavosertib, erlotinib, trametinib, and vemurafenib, against a cohort of PDCs, PDOrgs, and PDXs from solid tumors including colon, gastroesophageal, head and neck, NSCLC, pancreatic, bladder, and uterine cancers. Our goal was to investigate whether drug sensitivities determined using PDCs and PDOrgs correlate with responses observed in the matching PDXs. Cultures were exposed to anticancer agents at concentrations ranging from 1 pM to 100 µM for periods of 4 or 6 days. The data indicated that the GI50 values for PDOrgs were in overall agreement with in vivo PDX drug responses measured as relative median to event free survival (RMEFS), where an event is the median time (days) from treatment initiation to tumor volume quadrupling, calculated as median time to tumor volume quadrupling for treated animals/median time to tumor volume quadrupling for control animals. For both paclitaxel and trametinib, responses in PDOrgs, from most sensitive to most resistant, were similar to the corresponding PDXs. Drug sensitivities determined in PDC monolayers were less clearly related to in vivo PDX responses; particularly for PDCs treated with carboplatin, gemcitabine, and SN-38. This work is part of a larger effort to provide a rigorous comparison between fully characterized and annotated PDCs-PDOrgs-PDXs to assess the value of different in vitro model systems for the prediction of PDX drug responses. This research was supported [in part] by the Developmental Therapeutics Program in the Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis of the National Cancer Institute. Funded by NCI Contract No. HHSN261200800001E. Citation Format: Petreena Campbell, Curtis Hose, Lara El Touny, Erik Harris, John Connelly, Carrie Bonomi, Kelly Dougherty, Savanna Styers, Abigail Walke, Jenna Moyer, Mariah Baldwin, Anna Wade, Michael Mullendore, Kaitlyn Arthur, Matthew Murphy, Kevin Plater, Marion Gibson, Joseph Geraghty, Michelle Gottholm-Ahalt, Tara Grinnage-Pulley, Tiffanie Chase, John Carter, Howard Stotler, Debbie Trail, Luke Stockwin, Dianne Newton, Yvonne Evrard, Melinda Hollingshead, Ralph E. Parchment, Nathan P. Coussens, Beverly A. Teicher, James H. Doroshow, Annamaria Rapisarda. Evaluation of patient-derived cell lines and cancer organoids for the prediction of drug responses in patient-derived xenograft models [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr 3913.