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Multicellular Modelling of Difficult-to-Treat Gastrointestinal Cancers: Current Possibilities and Challenges

Sarah K. Hakuno, Ellis Michiels, Eleonore B Kuhlemaijer, Ilse Rooman, Lukas J.A.C. Hawinkels, Marije Slingerland

2022International Journal of Molecular Sciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cancers affecting the gastrointestinal system are highly prevalent and their incidence is still increasing. Among them, gastric and pancreatic cancers have a dismal prognosis (survival of 5-20%) and are defined as difficult-to-treat cancers. This reflects the urge for novel therapeutic targets and aims for personalised therapies. As a prerequisite for identifying targets and test therapeutic interventions, the development of well-established, translational and reliable preclinical research models is instrumental. This review discusses the development, advantages and limitations of both patient-derived organoids (PDO) and patient-derived xenografts (PDX) for gastric and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). First and next generation multicellular PDO/PDX models are believed to faithfully generate a patient-specific avatar in a preclinical setting, opening novel therapeutic directions for these difficult-to-treat cancers. Excitingly, future opportunities such as PDO co-cultures with immune or stromal cells, organoid-on-a-chip models and humanised PDXs are the basis of a completely new area, offering close-to-human models. These tools can be exploited to understand cancer heterogeneity, which is indispensable to pave the way towards more tumour-specific therapies and, with that, better survival for patients.

Topics & Concepts

Multicellular organismCurrent (fluid)Gastrointestinal cancerIntensive care medicineMedicineBiologyComputational biologyCancerInternal medicineColorectal cancerEngineeringCellGeneticsElectrical engineeringPancreatic and Hepatic Oncology ResearchCancer Cells and MetastasisGastric Cancer Management and Outcomes
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