4.7 Article

5-fluorouracil treatment of patient-derived scaffolds from colorectal cancer reveal clinically critical information

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12967-022-03423-6

Keywords

Colorectal cancer; Patient-derived scaffold; Decellularized matrix; 5-fluorouracil; Drug screening

Funding

  1. University of Gothenburg
  2. Assar Gabrielssons Research Foundation
  3. Swedish Cancer Society [19-0306, 19-0317]
  4. Swedish Research Council [2016-01530, 2017-01392, 2019-01273, 2020-01008]
  5. Swedish government [716321, 721091, 784211, 965965, 965580]
  6. Swedish county councils, the ALF-agreement [716321, 721091, 784211, 965965, 965580]
  7. Wilhelm and Martina Lundgren Foundation for Scientific Research
  8. Region Vastra Gotaland, Sweden [2019-01273]
  9. Swedish Society of Medicine [961345]
  10. Swedens Innovation Agency [2017-03737]
  11. Vinnova [2020-01008, 2017-03737] Funding Source: Vinnova
  12. Swedish Research Council [2016-01530, 2019-01273] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
  13. Forte [2019-01273] Funding Source: Forte

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Colorectal cancer is a common diagnosis worldwide, with many patients not responding to standard chemotherapy. This study used patient-derived scaffolds to investigate how individual patient-specific microenvironments influence the chemotherapy response in colorectal cancer. The findings suggest that tumor microenvironment can influence drug resistance and potential disease relapse, providing insights for optimized precision medicine in colorectal cancer treatment.
Background Colorectal cancer is a commonly diagnosed cancer worldwide. Unfortunately, many patients do not respond to standard chemotherapy treatments and develop disease relapse and metastases. Besides cancer cell specific genetic changes, heterogeneity in the tumor microenvironment contribute to the clinical presentation of the disease and can potentially also influence drug resistance. By using a recently developed patient-derived scaffold method monitoring how a standardized reporter cancer cell line adapts to various microenvironments treated with chemotherapy, we wanted to clarify how individual patient specific microenvironments influence the chemotherapy response in colorectal cancer. Methods Surgically resected colorectal cancer specimens from 89 patients were decellularized to produce patient-derived scaffold, which were seeded with HT29 cells, cultured for 3 weeks, and treated with 5-fluorouracil. Gene expression changes of adapted and treated HT29 cells were monitored by qPCR and compared with clinical parameters including disease-free survival. Results The effects of 5-fluorouracil treatment varied between different patient-derived scaffold, but generally induced a reduced expression of proliferation genes and increased expression of pluripotency and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition genes. Interestingly, patient-derived scaffold cultures obtained from patients with disease recurrences showed a significantly less pronounced anti-proliferative effect of 5-fluorouracil and more pronounced increase of pluripotency, with MKI67 and POU5F1 being among the most significant genes linked to disease relapse in colorectal cancer. Conclusions Colorectal patient-derived scaffold can decode clinically relevant tumor microenvironmental influence of 5-fluorouracil treatment effects opening up for optimized precision medicine in colorectal cancer treatment.

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