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An Organoid-based Functional Precision Medicine Trial in Osteosarcoma

Recruiting
Conditions
Osteosarcoma
Interventions
Other: standard of care biopsy
Registration Number
NCT06064682
Lead Sponsor
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to examine if we can predict sensitivity of osteosarcoma to different chemotherapy agents using tissue cultures in the laboratory. We know that different chemotherapy agents can be used in the treatment, but not every sarcoma responds to them equally. It is important to understand if testing of the tissue obtained during a routine biopsy or surgery may be useful in selecting appropriate treatments. In addition, additional testing of the tumor, including genetic testing, will help us to understand osteosarcoma better.

Detailed Description

Investigators successfully established a miniaturized system that allows the setup of hundreds of wells and perform assays with minimal manipulation. The adapted geometry used to plate tumor cells in Matrigel, to generate mini-rings around the rim of the wells. This is attained by plating single-cell suspensions obtained from a cell line or a surgical specimen pre-mixed with cold Matrigel in a ring shape around the rim in 96-well plates. Rings can be established using a single-well or multichannel pipette. Cancer cell lines grown in mini-ring format give rise to organized tumor organoids that recapitulate features of the original histology. Treatment protocols and readouts for the mini-ring approach have been optimized. Seeding cells takes place on day 0, 2-3 days are allowed to establish organoids and it is followed by two consecutive daily drug treatments. The assay is flexible and can be easily adapted to single treatments followed by longer incubations, multiple consecutive recurring treatments, multi-drug combinations, or other screening strategies. Assays were implemented to quantify drug response by measuring cell viability after staining of live organoids with specific dyes followed by imaging. The pipeline has been extended to sarcomas: the team characterized organoids established from over 120 sarcoma biopsies, resections, and metastasectomies. Sarcoma organoids showed patient-specific growth characteristics and subtype-specific histopathology. Organoid sensitivity correlated with diagnostic subtype, patient age at diagnosis, lesion type, prior treatment history, and disease trajectory for a subset of the compounds screened. Organoid screening can provide information to facilitate optimal drug selection, avoid ineffective therapies, and mirror patient outcomes in sarcoma.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Group 2: metastatic diseasestandard of care biopsypatients with metastatic osteosarcoma who are scheduled to undergo either biopsy or surgery of metastatic disease
Group 1: local tumorstandard of care biopsypatients with localized osteosarcoma who are scheduled to undergo diagnostic biopsy and are planned for surgical excision of the primary tumor
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
organoids from initial biopsytwo years

To assess the feasibility of establishing organoids from initial biopsy and from postsurgical sample in patients with osteosarcoma, both in patients with localized disease and metastatic disease

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
clinical benefittwo years

To correlate the magnitude of clinical benefit in patients with metastatic osteosarcoma treated with systemic chemotherapy with the chemotherapeutic drug sensitivity in the organoids established from biopsy or surgical excision of metastatic disease.

drug sensitivity of organoidstwo years

To compare drug sensitivity of organoids established from the original biopsy to drug sensitivity of organoids established from the surgical excision of the primary tumor after neoadjuvant chemotherapy

degree of necrosis in the tumortwo years

To correlate the degree of necrosis in the tumor obtained by the surgical excision of the primary tumor after neoadjuvant chemotherapy with the chemotherapeutic drug sensitivity in the organoids.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UCLA / Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

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