Cell Reports (Apr 2023)

Drug-repurposing screen on patient-derived organoids identifies therapy-induced vulnerability in KRAS-mutant colon cancer

  • Sander Mertens,
  • Maarten A. Huismans,
  • Carla S. Verissimo,
  • Bas Ponsioen,
  • Rene Overmeer,
  • Natalie Proost,
  • Olaf van Tellingen,
  • Marieke van de Ven,
  • Harry Begthel,
  • Sylvia F. Boj,
  • Hans Clevers,
  • Jeanine M.L. Roodhart,
  • Johannes L. Bos,
  • Hugo J.G. Snippert

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 4
p. 112324

Abstract

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Summary: Patient-derived organoids (PDOs) are widely heralded as a drug-screening platform to develop new anti-cancer therapies. Here, we use a drug-repurposing library to screen PDOs of colorectal cancer (CRC) to identify hidden vulnerabilities within therapy-induced phenotypes. Using a microscopy-based screen that accurately scores drug-induced cell killing, we have tested 414 putative anti-cancer drugs for their ability to switch the EGFRi/MEKi-induced cytostatic phenotype toward cytotoxicity. A majority of validated hits (9/37) are microtubule-targeting agents that are commonly used in clinical oncology, such as taxanes and vinca-alkaloids. One of these drugs, vinorelbine, is consistently effective across a panel of >25 different CRC PDOs, independent of RAS mutational status. Unlike vinorelbine alone, its combination with EGFR/MEK inhibition induces apoptosis at all stages of the cell cycle and shows tolerability and effective anti-tumor activity in vivo, setting the basis for a clinical trial to treat patients with metastatic RAS-mutant CRC.

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