Cancers (Aug 2021)

Zebrafish Patient-Derived Xenografts Identify Chemo-Response in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma Patients

  • Alice Usai,
  • Gregorio Di Franco,
  • Margherita Piccardi,
  • Perla Cateni,
  • Luca Emanuele Pollina,
  • Caterina Vivaldi,
  • Enrico Vasile,
  • Niccola Funel,
  • Matteo Palmeri,
  • Luciana Dente,
  • Alfredo Falcone,
  • Dimitri Giunchi,
  • Alessandro Massolo,
  • Vittoria Raffa,
  • Luca Morelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13164131
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 16
p. 4131

Abstract

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It is increasingly evident the necessity of new predictive tools for the treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma in a personalized manner. We present a co-clinical trial testing the predictiveness of zPDX (zebrafish patient-derived xenograft) for assessing if patients could benefit from a therapeutic strategy (ClinicalTrials.gov: XenoZ, NCT03668418). zPDX are generated xenografting tumor tissues in zebrafish embryos. zPDX were exposed to chemotherapy regimens commonly used. We considered a zPDX a responder (R) when a decrease ≥50% in the relative tumor area was reported; otherwise, we considered them a non-responder (NR). Patients were classified as Responder if their own zPDX was classified as an R for the chemotherapy scheme she/he received an adjuvant treatment; otherwise, we considered them a Non-Responder. We compared the cancer recurrence rate at 1 year after surgery and the disease-free survival (DFS) of patients of both groups. We reported a statistically significant higher recurrence rate in the Non-Responder group: 66.7% vs. 14.3% (p = 0.036), anticipating relapse/no relapse within 1 year after surgery in 12/16 patients. The mean DFS was longer in the R-group than the NR-group, even if not statistically significant: 19.2 months vs. 12.7 months, (p = 0.123). The proposed strategy could potentially improve preclinical evaluation of treatment modalities and may enable prospective therapeutic selection in everyday clinical practice.

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