Abstract

Background and aimsPancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has the worst survival rate among tumors. At the time of diagnosis, over 80 percent of PDACs are considered surgically unresectable, and there is an unmet need for treatment options in these inoperable PDACs. The study aimed to establish a patient-derived organoid (PDO) platform from endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle biopsy (EUS-FNB) collected at diagnosis and to determine its clinical applicability for the timely treatment of unresectable PDAC. MethodsPatients with suspected PDAC were prospectively enrolled at the Samsung Medical Center from 2015 to 2019. PDAC tissues were acquired by EUS-FNB to establish PDAC PDOs, which were comprehensively analyzed for histology, genomic sequencing, and high-throughput screening (HTS) drug sensitivity test. ResultsPDAC PDOs were established with a success rate of 83.2% (94/113). It took approximately 3 weeks from acquiring minimal EUS-FNB specimens to generating sufficient PDAC PDOs for the simultaneous analysis of HTS drug sensitivity test and genomic analysis. The high concordance between PDAC tissues and matched PDOs was confirmed, and whole-exome sequencing revealed the increased detection of genetic alterations in PDOs, compared with in EUS-FNB tissues. The HTS drug sensitivity test showed the clinical correlation between the ex vivo PDO response and the actual chemotherapeutic response of the study patients in the real world (13 out of 15 cases). In addition, whole-transcriptome sequencing identified candidate genes associated with nab-paclitaxel resistance, such as ITGB7, ANPEP, and ST3GAL1. ConclusionsThis PDAC PDO platform allows several therapeutic drugs to be tested within a short time window and opens the possibility for timely personalized medicine as a “Patient Avatar Model” in clinical practice.

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