Ex vivo therapeutic screening of metastatic cSCC: A review of methodological considerations for clinical implementation.
Jessica ConleyJay R PerryBruce G AshfordMarie RansonPublished in: Experimental dermatology (2024)
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is the second most common malignancy worldwide, with most deaths caused by locally advanced and metastatic disease. Treatment of resectable metastases is typically limited to invasive surgery with adjuvant radiotherapy; however, many patients fail to respond and there is minimal data to predict response or propose effective alternatives. Precision medicine could improve this, though genomic biomarkers remain elusive in the high mutational background and genomic complexity of cSCC. A phenotypic approach to precision medicine using patient-derived ex vivo tumour models is gaining favour for its capacity to directly assess biological responses to therapeutics as a functional, predictive biomarker. However, the use of ex vivo models for guiding therapeutic selection has yet to be employed for metastatic cSCC. This review will therefore evaluate the existing experimental models of metastatic cSCC and discuss how ex vivo methods could overcome the shortcomings of these existing models. Disease-specific considerations for a prospective methodological pipeline will also be discussed in the context of precision medicine.
Keyphrases
- squamous cell carcinoma
- locally advanced
- small cell lung cancer
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- phase ii study
- rectal cancer
- end stage renal disease
- lymph node metastasis
- early stage
- primary care
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- healthcare
- minimally invasive
- radiation therapy
- peritoneal dialysis
- copy number
- machine learning
- coronary artery disease
- coronary artery bypass
- gene expression
- radiation induced
- dna methylation
- quality improvement
- genome wide
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- replacement therapy
- acute coronary syndrome