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Carboplatin response in preclinical models for ovarian cancer: comparison of 2D monolayers, spheroids, ex vivo tumors and in vivo models

Melica Nourmoussavi Brodeur, Kayla Simeone, Kim Leclerc-Deslauniers, Hubert Fleury, Eurı́dice Carmona, Diane Provencher, Anne‐Marie Mes‐Masson

2021Scientific Reports49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most lethal gynecological cancer. Among the key challenges in developing effective therapeutics is the poor translation of preclinical models used in the drug discovery pipeline. This leaves drug attrition rates and costs at an unacceptably high level. Previous work has highlighted the discrepancies in therapeutic response between current in vitro and in vivo models. To address this, we conducted a comparison study to differentiate the carboplatin chemotherapy response across four different model systems including 2D monolayers, 3D spheroids, 3D ex vivo tumors and mouse xenograft models. We used six previously characterized EOC cell lines of varying chemosensitivity and performed viability assays for each model. In vivo results from the mouse model correlated with 2D response in 3/6 cell lines while they correlated with 3D spheroids and the ex vivo model in 4/6 and 5/5 cell lines, respectively. Our results emphasize the variability in therapeutic response across models and demonstrate that the carboplatin response in EOC cell lines cultured in a 3D ex vivo model correlates best with the in vivo response. These results highlight a more feasible, reliable, and cost-effective preclinical model with the highest translational potential for drug screening and prediction studies in EOC.

Topics & Concepts

Ex vivoCarboplatinIn vivoSpheroidOvarian cancerMedicineCancer researchCancerCell culturePharmacologyBiologyChemotherapyInternal medicineCisplatinBiotechnologyGeneticsCancer Cells and MetastasisImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
Carboplatin response in preclinical models for ovarian cancer: comparison of 2D monolayers, spheroids, ex vivo tumors and in vivo models | Litcius