An ex vivo platform to guide drug combination treatment in relapsed/refractory lymphoma.
Jasmine GohSanjay De MelMichal Marek HoppeMasturah Bte Mohd Abdul RashidXi Yun ZhangPatrick JaynesEsther Ka Yan NgNur'Atiqa Diana Binti Rahmatnull JayalakshmiClementine Xin LiuLimei PoonEsther ChanJoanne LeeYen Lin CheeLiang Piu KohLip Kun TanTeck Guan SohYi Ching YuenHoi-Yin LoiSiok Bian NgXueying GohDonovan EuStanley LohSheldon NgDaryl TanDaryl Ming Zhe CheahWan Lu PangDachuan HuangShin Yeu OngChandramouli NagarajanJason Yongsheng ChanJeslin Chian Hung HaLay Poh KhooNagavalli SomasundaramTiffany TangChoon-Kiat OngWee-Joo ChngSoon Thye LimEdward Kai-Hua ChowAnand D JeyasekharanPublished in: Science translational medicine (2022)
Although combination therapy is the standard of care for relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (RR-NHL), combination treatment chosen for an individual patient is empirical, and response rates remain poor in individuals with chemotherapy-resistant disease. Here, we evaluate an experimental-analytic method, quadratic phenotypic optimization platform (QPOP), for prediction of patient-specific drug combination efficacy from a limited quantity of biopsied tumor samples. In this prospective study, we enrolled 71 patients with RR-NHL (39 B cell NHL and 32 NK/T cell NHL) with a median of two prior lines of treatment, at two academic hospitals in Singapore from November 2017 to August 2021. Fresh biopsies underwent ex vivo testing using a panel of 12 drugs with known efficacy against NHL to identify effective single and combination treatments. Individualized QPOP reports were generated for 67 of 75 patient samples, with a median turnaround time of 6 days from sample collection to report generation. Doublet drug combinations containing copanlisib or romidepsin were most effective against B cell NHL and NK/T cell NHL samples, respectively. Off-label QPOP-guided therapy offered at physician discretion in the absence of standard options ( n = 17) resulted in five complete responses. Among patients with more than two prior lines of therapy, the rates of progressive disease were lower with QPOP-guided treatments than with conventional chemotherapy. Overall, this study shows that the identification of patient-specific drug combinations through ex vivo analysis was achievable for RR-NHL in a clinically applicable time frame. These data provide the basis for a prospective clinical trial evaluating ex vivo-guided combination therapy in RR-NHL.
Keyphrases
- combination therapy
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- clinical trial
- healthcare
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- emergency department
- acute myeloid leukemia
- primary care
- case report
- palliative care
- multiple myeloma
- quality improvement
- study protocol
- locally advanced
- electronic health record
- replacement therapy
- smoking cessation
- phase ii
- double blind