Identifying cell lines across pan-cancer to be used in preclinical research as a proxy for patient tumor samples.
Banabithi BoseSerdar BozdagPublished in: Communications biology (2024)
In pre-clinical trials of anti-cancer drugs, cell lines are utilized as a model for patient tumor samples to understand the response of drugs. However, in vitro culture of cell lines, in general, alters the biology of the cell lines and likely gives rise to systematic differences from the tumor samples' genomic profiles; hence the drug response of cell lines may deviate from actual patients' drug response. In this study, we computed a similarity score for the selection of cell lines depicting the close and far resemblance to patient tumor samples in twenty-two different cancer types at genetic, genomic, and epigenetic levels integrating multi-omics datasets. We also considered the presence of immune cells in tumor samples and cancer-related biological pathways in this score which aids personalized medicine research in cancer. We showed that based on these similarity scores, cell lines were able to recapitulate the drug response of patient tumor samples for several FDA-approved cancer drugs in multiple cancer types. Based on these scores, several of the high-rank cell lines were shown to have a close likeness to the corresponding tumor type in previously reported in vitro experiments.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell
- case report
- clinical trial
- end stage renal disease
- randomized controlled trial
- stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- emergency department
- copy number
- dna methylation
- childhood cancer
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- peritoneal dialysis
- young adults
- adverse drug
- patient reported outcomes
- double blind