Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research (Aug 2023)

Breast cancer patient-derived microtumors resemble tumor heterogeneity and enable protein-based stratification and functional validation of individualized drug treatment

  • Nicole Anderle,
  • Felix Schäfer-Ruoff,
  • Annette Staebler,
  • Nicolas Kersten,
  • André Koch,
  • Cansu Önder,
  • Anna-Lena Keller,
  • Simone Liebscher,
  • Andreas Hartkopf,
  • Markus Hahn,
  • Markus Templin,
  • Sara Y. Brucker,
  • Katja Schenke-Layland,
  • Christian Schmees

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13046-023-02782-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 1
pp. 1 – 25

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Despite tremendous progress in deciphering breast cancer at the genomic level, the pronounced intra- and intertumoral heterogeneity remains a major obstacle to the advancement of novel and more effective treatment approaches. Frequent treatment failure and the development of treatment resistance highlight the need for patient-derived tumor models that reflect the individual tumors of breast cancer patients and allow a comprehensive analyses and parallel functional validation of individualized and therapeutically targetable vulnerabilities in protein signal transduction pathways. Here, we introduce the generation and application of breast cancer patient-derived 3D microtumors (BC-PDMs). Residual fresh tumor tissue specimens were collected from n = 102 patients diagnosed with breast cancer and subjected to BC-PDM isolation. BC-PDMs retained histopathological characteristics, and extracellular matrix (ECM) components together with key protein signaling pathway signatures of the corresponding primary tumor tissue. Accordingly, BC-PDMs reflect the inter- and intratumoral heterogeneity of breast cancer and its key signal transduction properties. DigiWest®-based protein expression profiling of identified treatment responder and non-responder BC-PDMs enabled the identification of potential resistance and sensitivity markers of individual drug treatments, including markers previously associated with treatment response and yet undescribed proteins. The combination of individualized drug testing with comprehensive protein profiling analyses of BC-PDMs may provide a valuable complement for personalized treatment stratification and response prediction for breast cancer.

Keywords