Patient-Derived Ex Vivo Cultures and Endpoint Assays with Surrogate Biomarkers in Functional Testing for Prediction of Therapeutic Response

Author:

Tsukamoto Yoshiyuki1,Hirashita Yuka12,Shibata Tomotaka3ORCID,Fumoto Shoichi4,Kurogi Shusaku1,Nakada Chisato5,Kinoshita Keisuke12,Fuchino Takafumi12,Murakami Kazunari2ORCID,Inomata Masafumi3,Moriyama Masatsugu1,Hijiya Naoki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, 1-1 Hasama-machi, Oita 879-5593, Japan

2. Department of Gastroenterology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Oita 879-5593, Japan

3. Department of Gastroenterological and Pediatric Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Oita 879-5593, Japan

4. Department of Surgery, Oita Nakamura Hospital, Oita 879-5593, Japan

5. Department of Urology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Oita 879-5593, Japan

Abstract

Prediction of therapeutic outcomes is important for cancer patients in order to reduce side effects and improve the efficacy of anti-cancer drugs. Currently, the most widely accepted method for predicting the efficacy of anti-cancer drugs is gene panel testing based on next-generation sequencing. However, gene panel testing has several limitations. For example, only 10% of cancer patients are estimated to have druggable mutations, even if whole-exome sequencing is applied. Additionally, even if optimal drugs are selected, a significant proportion of patients derive no benefit from the indicated drug treatment. Furthermore, most of the anti-cancer drugs selected by gene panel testing are molecularly targeted drugs, and the efficacies of cytotoxic drugs remain difficult to predict. Apart from gene panel testing, attempts to predict chemotherapeutic efficacy using ex vivo cultures from cancer patients have been increasing. Several groups have retrospectively demonstrated correlations between ex vivo drug sensitivity and clinical outcome. For ex vivo culture, surgically resected tumor tissue is the most abundant source. However, patients with recurrent or metastatic tumors do not usually undergo surgery, and chemotherapy may be the only option for those with inoperable tumors. Therefore, predictive methods using small amounts of cancer tissue from diagnostic materials such as endoscopic, fine-needle aspirates, needle cores and liquid biopsies are needed. To achieve this, various types of ex vivo culture and endpoint assays using effective surrogate biomarkers of drug sensitivity have recently been developed. Here, we review the variety of ex vivo cultures and endpoint assays currently available.

Funder

Oita University President’s Strategic Discretionary Fund

JSPS KAKENHI

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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