Abstract

For many years, cell lines and animal models have been essential to improve our understanding of the basis of cell metabolism, signaling, and genetics. They also provided an essential boost to cancer drug discovery. Nevertheless, these model systems failed to reproduce the tumor heterogeneity and the complex biological interactions between cancer cells and human hosts, making a high priority search for alternative methods that are able to export results from model systems to humans, which has become a major bottleneck in the drug development. The emergent human in vitro 3D cell culture technologies have attracted widespread attention because they seem to have the potential to overcome these limitations. Organoids are unique 3D culture models with the ability to self-organize in contained structures. Their versatility has offered an exceptional window of opportunity to approach human cancers. Pancreatic cancers (PCs) patient-derived-organoids (PDOs) preserve histological, genomic, and molecular features of neoplasms they originate from and therefore retain their heterogeneity. Patient-derived organoids can be established with a high success rate from minimal tissue core specimens acquired with endoscopic-ultrasound-guided techniques and assembled into platforms, representing tens to hundreds of cancers each conserving specific features, expanding the types of patient samples that can be propagated and analyzed in the laboratory. Because of their nature, PDO platforms are multipurpose systems that can be easily adapted in co-culture settings to perform a wide spectrum of studies, ranging from drug discovery to immune response evaluation to tumor-stroma interaction. This possibility to increase the complexity of organoids creating a hybrid culture with non-epithelial cells increases the interest in organoid-based platforms giving a pragmatic way to deeply study biological interactions in vitro. In this view, implementing organoid models in co-clinical trials to compare drug responses may represent the next step toward even more personalized medicine. In the present review, we discuss how PDO platforms are shaping modern-day oncology aiding to unravel the most complex aspects of PC.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a highly aggressive disease with a very dismal prognosis and a generalized poor treatment response [1]

  • As unresectable cases represent about 85% of patients with PC [33], it has been fruitfully explored the derivation of organoids from the limited tissue amount of endoscopic biopsies with fine needle aspiration (FNA)

  • Developing organoids from advanced pancreatic cancer patients that predict non response or response; Secondary outcome: Functional studies will be done with the patient derived organoids to find biomarkers that correlate with response in organoids and patients

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a highly aggressive disease with a very dismal prognosis and a generalized poor treatment response [1]. Another study characterized the genome and transcriptome profile of a library of 66 PDO cultures derived from primary PDAC and developed a specific drug-testing pipeline demonstrating a quite similar sensitivity profile between PDO response and outcome of the patient [50]. The authors used a microwell chip with fluidicindependent hexagonal arrays to create a cross-contaminationfree co-culture system of organoids of patients and pancreatic stellate cells These stomal cells can switch from a quiescent to an active state under specific stimuli-like inflammation and tumor development allowing the study of PC pathogenesis [57]. Miscellaneous reconstitution approaches have been proposed for modeling disease ecosystems trying to reproduce the symbiotic interactions seen in the whole organism Such co-culture strategies have been utilized to supplement PDOs with CAFs, a tumor-specific stromal element of TME that is thought to exert a pleiotropic role in cancer development [35, 59]. When subcutaneously injected in mice, Wnt-non-producing organoids did not generate tumor mass, whereas co-transplantation with CAFs increased engraftment

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