Image-based ex-vivo drug screening for patients with aggressive haematological malignancies: interim results from a single-arm, open-label, pilot study

Berend Snijder(ETH Zurich), Gregory I. Vladimer(Evercyte (Austria)), Nikolaus Krall(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Katsuhiro Miura(Medical University of Vienna), Ann-Sofie Schmolke(Medical University of Vienna), Christoph Kornauth(Medical University of Vienna), Oscar Lopez de la Fuente(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Hye-Soo Choi(Medical University of Vienna), Emiel van der Kouwe(Medical University of Vienna), Sinan Gültekin(Medical University of Vienna), Lukas Kazianka(Medical University of Vienna), Johannes W. Bigenzahn(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Gregor Hoermann(Medical University of Vienna), Nicole Prutsch(Medical University of Vienna), Olaf Merkel(Medical University of Vienna), Anna Ringler(Christian Doppler Laboratory for Thermoelectricity), Monika Sabler(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Georg Jeryczynski(Medical University of Vienna), Marius E. Mayerhoefer(Medical University of Vienna), Ingrid Simonitsch‐Klupp(Medical University of Vienna), Katharina Ocko(Vienna General Hospital), Franz X. Felberbauer(Medical University of Vienna), Leonhard Müllauer(Medical University of Vienna), Gerald W. Prager(Comprehensive Cancer Center Vienna), Belgin Korkmaz(Medical University of Vienna), Lukas Kenner(Medical University of Vienna), Wolfgang R. Sperr(Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Cancer Research), Róbert Královics(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Heinz Gisslinger(Medical University of Vienna), Peter Valent(Ludwig Boltzmann Cluster for Cardiovascular Research), Stefan Kubicek(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine), Ulrich Jäger(Medical University of Vienna), Philipp B. Staber(Medical University of Vienna), Giulio Superti‐Furga(CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine)
The Lancet Haematology
November 16, 2017
Cited by 182Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with refractory or relapsed haematological malignancies have few treatment options and short survival times. Identification of effective therapies with genomic-based precision medicine is hampered by intratumour heterogeneity and incomplete understanding of the contribution of various mutations within specific cancer phenotypes. Ex-vivo drug-response profiling in patient biopsies might aid effective treatment identification; however, proof of its clinical utility is limited. METHODS: We investigated the feasibility and clinical impact of multiparametric, single-cell, drug-response profiling in patient biopsies by immunofluorescence, automated microscopy, and image analysis, an approach we call pharmacoscopy. First, the ability of pharmacoscopy to separate responders from non-responders was evaluated retrospectively for a cohort of 20 newly diagnosed and previously untreated patients with acute myeloid leukaemia. Next, 48 patients with aggressive haematological malignancies were prospectively evaluated for pharmacoscopy-guided treatment, of whom 17 could receive the treatment. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival in pharmacoscopy-treated patients, as compared with their own progression-free survival for the most recent regimen on which they had progressive disease. This trial is ongoing and registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT03096821. FINDINGS: Pharmacoscopy retrospectively predicted the clinical response of 20 acute myeloid leukaemia patients to initial therapy with 88·1% accuracy. In this interim analysis, 15 (88%) of 17 patients receiving pharmacoscopy-guided treatment had an overall response compared with four (24%) of 17 patients with their most recent regimen (odds ratio 24·38 [95% CI 3·99-125·4], p=0·0013). 12 (71%) of 17 patients had a progression-free survival ratio of 1·3 or higher, and median progression-free survival increased by four times, from 5·7 (95% CI 4·1-12·1) weeks to 22·6 (7·4-34·0) weeks (hazard ratio 3·14 [95% CI 1·37-7·22], p=0·0075). INTERPRETATION: Routine clinical integration of pharmacoscopy for treatment selection is technically feasible, and led to improved treatment of patients with aggressive refractory haematological malignancies in an initial patient cohort, warranting further investigation. FUNDING: Austrian Academy of Sciences; European Research Council; Austrian Science Fund; Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy; National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development; Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank; MPN Research Foundation; European Molecular Biology Organization; and Swiss National Science Foundation.


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