Functional temozolomide sensitivity testing of patient-specific glioblastoma stem cell cultures is predictive of clinical outcome.
Transl Oncol
; 26: 101535, 2022 Dec.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36115076
ABSTRACT
Serum-free culturing of patient-derived glioblastoma biopsies enrich for glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs) and is recognized as a disease-relevant model system in glioblastoma (GBM). We hypothesized that the temozolomide (TMZ) drug sensitivity of patient-derived GSC cultures correlates to clinical sensitivity patterns and has clinical predictive value in a cohort of GBM patients. To this aim, we established 51 individual GSC cultures from surgical biopsies from both treatment-naïve primary and pretreated recurrent GBM patients. The cultures were evaluated for sensitivity to TMZ over a dosing range achievable in normal clinical practice. Drug efficacy was quantified by the drug sensitivity score. MGMT-methylation status was investigated by pyrosequencing. Correlative, contingency, and survival analyses were performed for associations between experimental and clinical data. We found a heterogeneous response to temozolomide in the GSC culture cohort. There were significant differences in the sensitivity to TMZ between the newly diagnosed and the TMZ-treated recurrent disease (p <0.01). There was a moderate correlation between MGMT-status and sensitivity to TMZ (r=0.459, p=0.0009). The relationship between MGMT status and TMZ efficacy was statistically significant on multivariate analyses (p=0.0051). We found a predictive value of TMZ sensitivity in individual GSC cultures to patient survival (p=0.0089). We conclude that GSC-enriched cultures hold clinical and translational relevance by their ability to reflect the clinical heterogeneity in TMZ-sensitivity, substantiate the association between TMZ-sensitivity and MGMT-promotor methylation status and appear to have a stronger predictive value than MGMT-promotor methylation on clinical responses to TMZ.
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1
Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Tipo de estudio:
Diagnostic_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Transl Oncol
Año:
2022
Tipo del documento:
Article