Patient-derived tumor models and their distinctive applications in personalized drug therapy

Jia He , Chunhe Zhang , Alican Ozkan , Tang Feng , Peiyan Duan , Shuo Wang , Xinrui Yang , Jing Xie , Xiaoheng Liu
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Abstract

Tumor models in vitro are conventional methods for developing anti-cancer drugs, evaluating drug delivery, or calculating drug efficacy. However, traditional cell line-derived tumor models are unable to capture the tumor heterogeneity in patients or mimic the interaction between tumors and their surroundings. Recently emerging patient-derived preclinical cancer models, including of patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model, circulating tumor cell (CTC)-derived model, and tumor organoids-on-chips, are promising in personalized drug therapy by recapitulating the complexities and personalities of tumors and surroundings. These patient-derived models have demonstrated potential advantages in satisfying the rigorous demands of specificity, accuracy, and efficiency necessary for personalized drug therapy. However, the selection of suitable models is depending on the specific therapeutic requirements dictated by cancer types, progressions, or the assay scale. As an example, PDX models show remarkable advantages to reconstruct solid tumors in vitro to understand drug delivery and metabolism. Similarly, CTC-derived models provide a sensitive platform for drug testing in advanced-stage patients, while also facilitating the development of drugs aimed at suppressing tumor metastasis. Meanwhile, the demand for large-scale testing has promoted the development of tumor organoids-on-chips, which serves as an optimal tool for high-throughput drug screening. This review summarizes the establishment and development of PDX, CTC-derived models, and tumor organoids-on-chips and addresses their distinctive advantages in drug discovery, sensitive testing, and screening, which demonstrate the potential to aid in the selection of suitable models for fundamental cancer research and clinical trials, and further developing the personalized drug therapy.

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患者来源的肿瘤模型及其在个性化药物治疗中的独特应用
体外肿瘤模型是开发抗癌药物、评估药物传递或计算药物疗效的常规方法。然而,传统的细胞系衍生的肿瘤模型无法捕捉患者的肿瘤异质性或模拟肿瘤与其周围环境之间的相互作用。最近出现的患者源性临床前癌症模型,包括患者源性异种移植(PDX)模型、循环肿瘤细胞(CTC)模型和肿瘤类器官芯片模型,通过概括肿瘤和周围环境的复杂性和个性,在个性化药物治疗中具有前景。这些患者衍生的模型在满足个性化药物治疗对特异性、准确性和效率的严格要求方面显示出潜在的优势。然而,选择合适的模型取决于特定的治疗要求,由癌症类型,进展,或测定规模。例如,PDX模型在体外重建实体肿瘤以了解药物传递和代谢方面显示出显著的优势。同样,ctc衍生的模型为晚期患者的药物测试提供了一个敏感的平台,同时也促进了旨在抑制肿瘤转移的药物的开发。同时,大规模测试的需求促进了肿瘤类器官芯片的发展,它是高通量药物筛选的最佳工具。本文综述了PDX、ctc衍生模型和肿瘤类器官芯片的建立和发展,并指出了它们在药物发现、敏感性测试和筛选方面的独特优势,这表明它们有可能帮助选择合适的模型进行基础癌症研究和临床试验,并进一步发展个性化药物治疗。
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