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Personalized functional profiling using ex-vivo patient-derived spheroids points out the potential of an antiangiogenic treatment in a patient with a metastatic lung atypical carcinoid.

Hichul KimVictoria El-KhouryNadine SchulteTianzuo ZhanJohannes BetgeLoic CousinEmanuele FelliPatrick PessauxArnaud OgierOliver OpitzBosung KuMatthias P EbertYong-Jun Kwon
Published in: Cancer biology & therapy (2022)
Lung carcinoids are neuroendocrine tumors representing 1 to 2% of lung cancers. This study outlines the case of a patient with a metastatic lung atypical carcinoid who presented with a pleural effusion and progression of liver metastases after developing resistance to conventional treatments. Personalized functional profiling (PFP), i.e. drug screening, was performed in ex-vivo spheroids obtained from the patient's liver metastasis to identify potential therapeutic options. The drug screening results revealed cediranib, an antiangiogenic drug, as a hit drug for this patient, from a library of 66 Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved and investigational drugs. Based on the PFP results and the reported evidence of clinical efficacy of bevacizumab and capecitabine combination in gastro-intestinal neuroendocrine tumors, this combination was given to the patient. Four months later, the pleural effusion and pleura carcinosis regressed and the liver metastasis did not progress. The patient experienced 2 years of a stable disease under the PFP-guided personalized treatment.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • neuroendocrine tumors
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • small cell lung cancer
  • single cell
  • emergency department
  • young adults
  • risk assessment
  • drug induced
  • adverse drug
  • metastatic breast cancer
  • locally advanced