Cancer organoids 2.0: modelling the complexity of the tumour immune microenvironment.
Roel PolakElisa T ZhangCalvin J KuoPublished in: Nature reviews. Cancer (2024)
The development of neoplasia involves a complex and continuous interplay between malignantly transformed cells and the tumour microenvironment (TME). Cancer immunotherapies targeting the immune TME have been increasingly validated in clinical trials but response rates vary substantially between tumour histologies and are often transient, idiosyncratic and confounded by resistance. Faithful experimental models of the patient-specific tumour immune microenvironment, capable of recapitulating tumour biology and immunotherapy effects, would greatly improve patient selection, target identification and definition of resistance mechanisms for immuno-oncology therapeutics. In this Review, we discuss currently available and rapidly evolving 3D tumour organoid models that capture important immune features of the TME. We highlight diverse opportunities for organoid-based investigations of tumour immunity, drug development and precision medicine.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- stem cells
- papillary thyroid
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- randomized controlled trial
- drug delivery
- case report
- palliative care
- high grade
- young adults
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell death
- cancer therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cerebral ischemia
- double blind
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