Purpose: Patients with colorectal cancer with peritoneal metastases (CRPMs) have limited treatment options and the lowest colorectal cancer survival rates. We aimed to determine whether organoid testing could help guide precision treatment for patients with CRPMs, as the clinical utility of prospective, functional drug screening including nonstandard agents is unknown.

Experimental Design: CRPM organoids (peritonoids) isolated from patients underwent parallel next-generation sequencing and medium-throughput drug panel testing to identify specific drug sensitivities for each patient. We measured the utility of such a service including: success of peritonoid generation, time to cultivate peritonoids, reproducibility of the medium-throughput drug testing, and documented changes to clinical therapy as a result of the testing.

Results: Peritonoids were successfully generated and validated from 68% (19/28) of patients undergoing standard care. Genomic and drug profiling was completed within 8 weeks and a formal report ranking drug sensitivities was provided to the medical oncology team upon failure of standard care treatment. This resulted in a treatment change for two patients, one of whom had a partial response despite previously progressing on multiple rounds of standard care chemotherapy. The barrier to implementing this technology in Australia is the need for drug access and funding for off-label indications.

Conclusions: Our approach is feasible, reproducible, and can guide novel therapeutic choices in this poor prognosis cohort, where new treatment options are urgently needed. This platform is relevant to many solid organ malignancies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8366292PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-0073DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

medium-throughput drug
12
standard care
12
drug screening
8
peritoneal metastases
8
colorectal cancer
8
treatment options
8
drug sensitivities
8
drug
7
patients
5
treatment
5

Similar Publications

Brain organoids offer unprecedented insights into brain development and disease modeling and hold promise for drug screening. Significant hindrances, however, are morphological and cellular heterogeneity, inter-organoid size differences, cellular stress, and poor reproducibility. Here, we describe a method that reproducibly generates thousands of organoids across multiple hiPSC lines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Open-source electrophilic fragment screening platform to identify chemical starting points for UCHL1 covalent inhibitors.

SLAS Discov

December 2024

Department of Cancer Biology and the Linde Program in Cancer Chemical Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA; Blais Proteomics Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA; Center for Emergent Drug Targets, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. Electronic address:

Target-based screening of covalent fragment libraries with mass spectrometry has emerged as a powerful strategy to identify chemical starting points for small molecule inhibitors or find new binding pockets on proteins of interest. These libraries span diverse chemical space with a modest number of compounds. Screening covalent fragments against purified protein targets reduces the demands on the mass spectrometer with respect to absolute throughput, detection limit, and dynamic range.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite SH2 domains, being pivotal in protein interactions linked to various diseases like cancer, we lack specific research tools for intracellular assays. Understanding SH2-mediated interactions and creating effective inhibitors requires tools which target individual protein domains. Affimer reagents exhibit promise, yet their potential against the extensive SH2 domain family remains largely unexplored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cell and gene therapy (CGT) is a field of therapeutic medicine that aims to treat, prevent, and cure diseases using engineered cells (stem cells, immune cells, and differentiated adult or fetal cells), vectors [Adeno Associated Virus (AAV), Adeno Virus (AV), Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV), Baculo Virus (BV), Lenti Virus (LV), Retro Virus (RV), etc.], and other carriers [non-viral vectors, virus-like particles (VLP), Lipid Nano-Particles (LNP), etc.].

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Automation of biochemical assays using an open-sourced, inexpensive robotic liquid handler.

SLAS Technol

December 2024

High Throughput Analytics, Analytical Research & Development, Merck & Co. Inc., Rahway, NJ, United States. Electronic address:

High Throughput Screening is crucial in pharmaceutical companies for efficient testing in drug discovery and development. Our Vaccines Analytical Research and Development (V-AR&D) department extensively uses robotic liquid handlers in their High Throughput Analytics (HTA) group for assay development and sample screening. However, these instruments are expensive and require extensive training.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!