Ex vivo tissue modelling informs drug selection for rare cancers.
Jenny H LeeZizhen MingVeronica K Y CheungBernadette PedersenJames J WykesCarsten E PalmeJonathan J ClarkRuta GuptaHelen RizosPublished in: International journal of cancer (2023)
The identification and therapeutic targeting of actionable gene mutations across many cancer types has resulted in improved response rates in a minority of patients. The identification of actionable mutations is usually not sufficient to ensure complete nor durable responses, and in rare cancers, where no therapeutic standard of care exists, precision medicine indications are often based on pan-cancer data. The inclusion of functional data, however, can provide evidence of oncogene dependence and guide treatment selection based on tumour genetic data. We applied an ex vivo cancer explant modelling approach, that can be embedded in routine clinical care and allows for pathological review within 10 days of tissue collection. We now report that ex vivo tissue modelling provided accurate longitudinal response data in a patient with BRAF V600E -mutant papillary thyroid tumour with squamous differentiation. The ex vivo model guided treatment selection for this patient and confirmed treatment resistance when the patient's disease progressed after 8 months of treatment.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- healthcare
- lymph node metastasis
- case report
- end stage renal disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- palliative care
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- peritoneal dialysis
- combination therapy
- squamous cell
- gene expression
- young adults
- high resolution
- prognostic factors
- genome wide
- cross sectional
- copy number
- health insurance
- chronic pain