Cancers (Feb 2024)

Drug Response of Patient-Derived Lung Cancer Cells Predicts Clinical Outcomes of Targeted Therapy

  • Sunshin Kim,
  • Youngjoo Lee,
  • Bo Ram Song,
  • Hanna Sim,
  • Eun Hye Kang,
  • Mihwa Hwang,
  • Namhee Yu,
  • Sehwa Hong,
  • Charny Park,
  • Beung-Chul Ahn,
  • Eun Jin Lim,
  • Kum Hui Hwang,
  • Seog-Yun Park,
  • Jin-Ho Choi,
  • Geon Kook Lee,
  • Ji-Youn Han

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16040778
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 778

Abstract

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Intratumor heterogeneity leads to different responses to targeted therapies, even within patients whose tumors harbor identical driver oncogenes. This study examined clinical outcomes according to a patient-derived cell (PDC)-based drug sensitivity test in lung cancer patients treated with targeted therapies. From 487 lung cancers, 397 PDCs were established with a success rate of 82%. In 139 PDCs from advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients receiving targeted therapies, the standardized area under the curve (AUC) values for the drugs was significantly correlated with their tumor response (p = 0.002). Among 59 chemo-naive EGFR/ALK-positive NSCLC patients, the PDC non-responders showed a significantly inferior response rate (RR) and progression-free survival (PFS) for the targeted drugs than the PDC responders (RR, 25% vs. 78%, p = 0.011; median PFS, 3.4 months [95% confidence interval (CI), 2.8–4.1] vs. 11.8 months [95% CI, 6.5–17.0], p < 0.001). Of 25 EGFR-positive NSCLC patients re-challenged with EGFR inhibitors, the PDC responder showed a higher RR than the PDC non-responder (42% vs. 15%). Four patients with wild-type EGFR or uncommon EGFR-mutant NSCLC were treated with EGFR inhibitors based on their favorable PDC response to EGFR inhibitors, and two patients showed dramatic responses. Therefore, the PDC-based drug sensitivity test results were significantly associated with clinical outcomes in patients with EGFR- or ALK-positive NSCLC. It may be helpful for predicting individual heterogenous clinical outcomes beyond genomic alterations.

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