Citizens for
Alternatives to Animal Research and Experimentation (CAARE)
April 2016
In contrast to tumor implants in mice, organoids offer a number of advantages. Hans Clevers, co-author of the organoid study at the Hubrecht Institute in the Netherlands, explained to Nature how organoids can be developed over several weeks to test drugs very quickly. Further, organoids can be developed for almost all patient tumors. With their compatibility for high-throughput screening, it’s possible to use organoids to test vast numbers of drugs or drug combinations in a relatively short period of time.
"Organoids" from patient tumors may boost precision medicine
As scientists learn more about the complexity of cancer, the need for
personalized treatments based on the patient’s individual cancer has become
increasingly pressing. A new three-dimensional cell culture technology shows
promise to develop these precision treatments more quickly and effectively
without using animals.
A team of scientists have developed 3D cell cultures, or “organoids” made up
of tumor cells from patients with colorectal cancer. The organoids
accurately mimic many of the intrinsic properties of the original tumors,
such as precise genetic changes. They also enable high-throughput drug
screening, which uses computer and robotic automation to evaluate the
effectiveness of large numbers of drugs in a short time period.
Ma thew Garnett, senior author of the study and a geneticist at Wellcome
Trust Sanger Institute in the UK describes how "This is the first time that
a collection of cancer organoids, or a living biobank, has been derived from
patient tumors.”
3-D organoid cultures derived from healthy and tumor tissue from colorectal
cancer patients are used for a high throughput drug screen to identify
genedrug associations that may facilitate personalized therapy. (Photo
courtesy of van de Wetering et al./Cell 2015)
The researchers obtained tumor tissue from 20 patients to develop 22
organoids for investigation. DNA sequencing of the organoids showed that
they expressed mutations that were highly similar to the biopsies obtained
from the tumors, confirming that the organoids provided accurate models of
the original tumors.
Other studies have tried to accomplish the same thing by growing tumors in
mice. Many attempts are currently underway to create “mouse-avatars” by
transplanting tumor tissue into immune-suppressed mice in the hopes of
modeling a particular patient’s cancer. The mice are immune-suppressed to
prevent their bodies from rejecting the grafted tissue.
But the mouse-avatars are slow to develop, consuming many months out of a
gravely ill patient’s time, sometimes delaying treatment by failing to
develop before the patient dies. In about 30% of cases, the engraftment
process fails entirely and the mouse tumor never takes hold. The lengthy
time span, failure rate and high cost – $10,000 to $12,000 not covered by
insurance – place a steep burden on patients already struggling with their
disease.
In contrast to tumor implants in mice, organoids offer a number of
advantages. Hans Clevers, co-author of the organoid study at the Hubrecht
Institute in the Netherlands, explained to Nature how organoids can be
developed over several weeks to test drugs very quickly. Further, organoids
can be developed for almost all patient tumors. With their compatibility for
high-throughput screening, it’s possible to use organoids to test vast
numbers of drugs or drug combinations in a relatively short period of time.
Clinical trials using organoids are underway in the Netherlands. Dr.
Clevers’ research team is also looking for ways to improve the organoids,
such as introducing an immune component to investigate immunotherapy, a very
promising area in cancer treatment. This is not possible in a mouse with a
compromised immune system.
Three-dimensional organoids show promise for an exciting new avenue of
personalizing cancer patient care – one that doesn’t use animals, offers
lower cost, greater accuracy and wider accessibility to patients.
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