作者
Karuna Ganesh,Chao Wu,Kevin P. O’Rourke,Bryan Szeglin,Youyun Zheng,Charles-Etienne Gabriel Sauvé,Mohammad Adileh,Isaac Wasserman,Michael R. Marco,Amanda S. Kim,Maha Shady,Francisco Sánchez-Vega,Wouter R. Karthaus,Helen Won,Seo-Hyun Choi,Raphael Pelossof,Afşar Barlas,Peter Ntiamoah,Emmanouil P. Pappou,Arthur E. Elghouayel,James S. Strong,Chin‐Tung Chen,Jennifer W. Harris,Martin R. Weiser,Garrett M. Nash,José G. Guillem,Iris H. Wei,Richard Kolesnick,Harini Veeraraghavan,Eduardo Ortiz,Iva Petkovska,Andrea Cercek,Katia Manova–Todorova,Leonard B. Saltz,Jessica A. Lavery,Ronald P. DeMatteo,Joan Massagué,Philip B. Paty,Rona Yaeger,Xi Chen,Sujata Patil,Hans Clevers,Michael F. Berger,Scott W. Lowe,Jinru Shia,Paul B. Romesser,Lukas E. Dow,Julio García‐Aguilar,Charles L. Sawyers,J. Joshua Smith
摘要
Rectal cancer (RC) is a challenging disease to treat that requires chemotherapy, radiation and surgery to optimize outcomes for individual patients. No accurate model of RC exists to answer fundamental research questions relevant to patients. We established a biorepository of 65 patient-derived RC organoid cultures (tumoroids) from patients with primary, metastatic or recurrent disease. RC tumoroids retained molecular features of the tumors from which they were derived, and their ex vivo responses to clinically relevant chemotherapy and radiation treatment correlated with the clinical responses noted in individual patients’ tumors. Upon engraftment into murine rectal mucosa, human RC tumoroids gave rise to invasive RC followed by metastasis to lung and liver. Importantly, engrafted tumors displayed the heterogenous sensitivity to chemotherapy observed clinically. Thus, the biology and drug sensitivity of RC clinical isolates can be efficiently interrogated using an organoid-based, ex vivo platform coupled with in vivo endoluminal propagation in animals. Rectal cancer organoids retain the pathological features of matched patient tumors and recapitulate clinical responses to chemoradiation.