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Culture and Drug Profiling of Patient Derived Malignant Pleural Effusions for Personalized Cancer Medicine

Ruiz, C. and Kustermann, S. and Pietilae, E. and Vlajnic, T. and Baschiera, B. and Arabi, L. and Lorber, T. and Oeggerli, M. and Savic, S. and Obermann, E. and Singer, T. and Rothschild, S. I. and Zippelius, A. and Roth, A. B. and Bubendorf, L.. (2016) Culture and Drug Profiling of Patient Derived Malignant Pleural Effusions for Personalized Cancer Medicine. PLoS One, 11 (8). e0160807.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/62541/

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The use of patients' own cancer cells for in vitro selection of the most promising treatment is an attractive concept in personalized medicine. Human carcinoma cells from malignant pleural effusions (MPEs) are suited for this purpose since they have already adapted to the liquid environment in the patient and do not depend on a stromal cell compartment. Aim of this study was to develop a systematic approach for the in-vitro culture of MPEs to analyze the effect of chemotherapeutic as well as targeted drugs. METHODS: MPEs from patients with solid tumors were selected for this study. After morphological and molecular characterization, they were cultured in medium supplemented with patient-derived sterile-filtered effusion supernatant. Growth characteristics were monitored in real-time using the xCELLigence system. MPEs were treated with a targeted therapeutic (erlotinib) according to the mutational status or chemotherapeutics based on the recommendation of the oncologists. RESULTS: We have established a robust system for the ex-vivo culture of MPEs and the application of drug tests in-vitro. The use of an antibody based magnetic cell separation system for epithelial cells before culture allowed treatment of effusions with only moderate tumor cell proportion. Experiments using drugs and drug-combinations revealed dose-dependent and specific growth inhibitory effects of targeted drugs. CONCLUSIONS: We developed a new approach for the ex-vivo culture of MPEs and the application of drug tests in-vitro using real-time measuring of cell growth, which precisely reproduced the effect of clinically established treatments by standard chemotherapy and targeted drugs. This sets the stage for future studies testing agents against specific targets from genomic profiling of metastatic tumor cells and multiple drug-combinations in a personalized manner.
Faculties and Departments:03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Biomedizin > Department of Biomedicine, University Hospital Basel > Cancer Immunology and Biology (Zippelius/Rochlitz)
UniBasel Contributors:Zippelius, Alfred
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
ISSN:1932-6203 (Electronic) 1932-6203 (Linking)
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
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Last Modified:21 May 2020 13:53
Deposited On:21 May 2020 13:53

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