‘Mini-tumours’ created to test cancer drug efficiency

The study was carried out on cancers of the digestive system

February 26, 2018 04:15 pm | Updated 04:24 pm IST

 The new approach could be used in the future to help choose treatment.

The new approach could be used in the future to help choose treatment.

Scientists have successfully grown mini versions of patients’ tumours in a lab - and tested them against dozens of drugs to find the best possible treatment.

In the study published in the journal Science , researchers treated the lab-grown ‘mini tumours’ with a range of drugs. They then looked to see how this compared to how successful treatment was in those patients. The approach found a drug that had a chance of shrinking a patient’s tumour in almost nine in 10 cases.

Drugs that did not work in patients also had no effect on the mini tumours. This suggests they could help predict when drugs would not work, researchers said.

The study, led by scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) in the UK, was carried out in bowel and stomach cancers, and other cancers of the digestive system. The results of the study did not change how patients were treated. However, the approach could be used in the future to help choose treatment.

Personalised treatments

According to Nicola Valeri, who led the study, the technique needed to be tested in large clinical trials, but that it “has the potential to help deliver truly personalised treatment.”

Mini tumours, also called organoids, are tiny balls of cancer cells grown in the lab. They can be grown from a tissue sample (biopsy). Scientists take cells from a tumour and place them inside a gel, where they are free to grow as a 3D ball.

Researchers believe that growing the cancer cells in this way can more closely mirror how they behave inside the body. They grew mini tumours from biopsies taken from 71 patients with advanced bowel, stomach or bile duct cancer that had spread to other parts of the body. The researchers tested 55 cancer drugs on the mini tumours, allowing them to compare the results to how each patient’s cancer responded to the treatment they were given.

Mini tumours were more effective at predicting when drugs would be effective than looking for gene faults (mutations) in the cancer cells’ DNA. The study focused on stomach and bowel cancer, but Valeri said that “the technique could be applied to a wide variety of cancer types“. Organoids have already been grown from a variety of different cancers, including liver, pancreatic and oesophageal.

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