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Efficient Establishment of Bile-Derived Organoids From Patients With Biliary Cancer.

Keisuke KinoshitaYoshiyuki TsukamotoYuka HirashitaTakafumi FuchinoShusaku KurogiTomohisa UchidaChisato NakadaTakashi MatsumotoKazuhisa OkamotoMitsuteru MotomuraSatoshi FukuchiRyota SagamiTakayuki NagaiYasuhiko GotohKensuke FukudaRyo OgawaKazuhiro MizukamiTadayoshi OkimotoMasaaki KodamaKazunari MurakamiMasatsugu MoriyamaNaoki Hijiya
Published in: Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology (2023)
Patient-derived tumor organoids have considerable potential as an in vitro diagnostic tool for drug susceptibility testing. In the present study, we investigated whether bile collected for diagnostic purposes could be a potential source for the establishment of biliary cancer organoids. Among 68 cases of biliary cancer, we successfully generated 60 bile-derived organoids (BDOs) from individual patients. Consistent with previous reports that described biliary cancer organoids from surgical tissues, the BDOs showed diverse morphologies such as simple cysts, multiloculated cysts, thick capsulated cysts, and solid masses. They also harbored mutations in KRAS and TP53 at frequencies of 15% and 55%, respectively. To enrich the cancer organoids by removing contaminated noncancerous components of BDOs, we attempted to verify the effectiveness of 3 different procedures, including repeat passage, xenografting, and selection with an MDM2 inhibitor for TP53 mutation-harboring BDOs. By monitoring the sequence and expression of mutated TP53, we found that all these procedures successfully enriched the cancer organoids. Our data suggest that BDOs can be established with minimal invasiveness from almost all patients with biliary cancers, including inoperable cases. Thus, despite some limitations with respect to the characterization of BDOs and methods for the enrichment of cancer cell-derived organoids, our data suggest that BDOs have potential applications in personalized medicine.
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