학술논문

A human vascularized microtumor model of patient-derived colorectal cancer recapitulates clinical disease
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Immunology
Orphan Drug
Rare Diseases
Cancer
Precision Medicine
Colo-Rectal Cancer
Biotechnology
Digestive Diseases
Clinical Research
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Colorectal Neoplasms
Microfluidics
Tumor Microenvironment
Clinical Sciences
General Clinical Medicine
Biochemistry and cell biology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Accurately modeling tumor biology and testing novel therapies on patient-derived cells is critically important to developing therapeutic regimens personalized to a patient's specific disease. The vascularized microtumor (VMT), or "tumor-on-a-chip," is a physiologic preclinical cancer model that incorporates key features of the native human tumor microenvironment within a transparent microfluidic platform, allowing rapid drug screening in vitro. Herein we optimize methods for generating patient-derived VMT (pVMT) using fresh colorectal cancer (CRC) biopsies and surgical resections to test drug sensitivities at the individual patient level. In response to standard chemotherapy and TGF-βR1 inhibition, we observe heterogeneous responses between pVMT derived from 6 patient biopsies, with the pVMT recapitulating tumor growth, histological features, metabolic heterogeneity, and drug responses of actual CRC tumors. Our results suggest that a translational infrastructure providing rapid information from patient-derived tumor cells in the pVMT, as established in this study, will support efforts to improve patient outcomes.