4.6 Article

Breast cancer patient-derived explant cultures recapitulate in vivo drug responses

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1040665

Keywords

breast cancer; patient-derived xenografts; ex vivo cultures; organoids; explants; drug sensitivity

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Assessing drug sensitivity in tumor tissue ex vivo is important for personalized cancer treatment, and culturing tumor organoids and explants can provide valuable information. This study focused on breast cancer tissue and evaluated different conditions for culturing and monitoring treatment efficacy using patient-derived xenografts (PDXs). The challenge of distinguishing between tumor and normal cells in the cultured tissue was also addressed. The feasibility of using breast cancer explants ex vivo to capture differences in drug sensitivity and facilitate functional precision medicine was demonstrated.
Assessment of drug sensitivity in tumor tissue ex vivo may significantly contribute to functional diagnostics to guide personalized treatment of cancer. Tumor organoid- and explant-cultures have become attractive tools towards this goal, although culturing conditions for breast cancer (BC) tissue have been among the most challenging to develop. Validation of possibilities to detect concordant responses in individual tumors and their respective cultures ex vivo is still needed. Here we employed BC patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) with distinct drug sensitivity, to evaluate different conditions for tissue dissociation, culturing and monitoring of treatment efficacy ex vivo, aiming to recapitulate the in vivo drug responses. The common challenge of discriminating between tumor and normal cells in the cultured tissue was also addressed. Following conventional enzymatic dissociation of BC tissue, the tumor cells stayed within the non-disrupted tissue fragments, while the single cells represented mostly normal host cells. By culturing such fragments as explants, viable tumor tissue could be maintained and treated ex vivo, providing representative indications on efficacy of the tested treatment. Thus, drug sensitivity profiles, including acquired chemoresistance seen in the PDXs, were recapitulated in the respective explants. To detect the concordant responses, however, the effect monitoring had to be harmonized with the characteristics of the cultured tissue. In conclusion, we present the feasibility of BC explants ex vivo to capture differences in drug sensitivity of individual tumors. The established protocols will aid in setting up an analogous platform for BC patient biopsies with the aim to facilitate functional precision medicine.

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