Development of patient-derived lymphomoids with preserved tumor architecture for lymphoma therapy screening

Albert Santamaria‐Martínez(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Justine Epiney(University Hospital of Lausanne), Divyanshu Srivastava(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Daniele Tavernari(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Marco Varrone(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Dina Milowich(Hôpital du Valais), Igor Letovanec(Hôpital du Valais), Thorsten Krueger(Hôpital Orthopédique de la Suisse Romande), Rafael Durán(University Hospital of Lausanne), Giovanni Ciriello(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Anne Cairoli(University Hospital of Lausanne), Elisa Oricchio(Swiss Cancer Center Léman)
Nature Communications
December 9, 2024
Cited by 6Open Access
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Abstract

The efficacy of anti-cancer therapies depends on the genomic composition of the tumor, its microenvironment, spatial organization, and intra-tumor heterogeneity. B-cell lymphomas are a heterogeneous group of tumors emerging from B-cells at different stages of differentiation and exhibiting tumor-specific interactions with the tumor microenvironment. Thus, the effect of drug treatments can be influenced by the tumor composition and functional interactions among immune cells. Here, we develop a platform to maintain small fragments of human lymphoma tissue in culture for several days, and use them to test response to small molecules. We collect 27 patient samples representative of different lymphoma subtypes, and establish ex vivo tissue fragments that retain histological, cellular, and molecular characteristics of the original tissue, here referred to as lymphomoids. Using lymphomoids, we test sensitivity to several clinically approved drugs in parallel and examine tissue remodeling upon treatment. Moreover, when this information is available, we show that the effect of the inhibitors observed in lymphomoids is consistent with the patients’ response in the clinic. Thus, lymphomoids represent an innovative ex vivo model to assess the effect of anti-cancer therapies while preserving the tissue structure and its components. Choosing the most effective anti-cancer therapy is difficult due to the high degree of tumour cell and tumour microenvironment heterogeneity. Here, the authors develop a platform for the generation of patient-derived B-cell lymphoma models (termed lymphomoids) which maintain the lymphoid tissue architecture, to enable drug screening.


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