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review article

Next-generation cancer organoids

LeSavage, Bauer L.
•
Suhar, Riley A.
•
Broguiere, Nicolas  
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2022
Nature Materials

Organotypic models of patient-specific tumours are revolutionizing our understanding of cancer heterogeneity and its implications for personalized medicine. These advancements are, in part, attributed to the ability of organoid models to stably preserve genetic, proteomic, morphological and pharmacotypic features of the parent tumour in vitro, while also offering unprecedented genomic and environmental manipulation. Despite recent innovations in organoid protocols, current techniques for cancer organoid culture are inherently uncontrolled and irreproducible, owing to several non-standardized facets including cancer tissue sources and subsequent processing, medium formulations, and animal-derived three-dimensional matrices. Given the potential for cancer organoids to accurately recapitulate the intra- and intertumoral biological heterogeneity associated with patient-specific cancers, eliminating the undesirable technical variability accompanying cancer organoid culture is necessary to establish reproducible platforms that accelerate translatable insights into patient care. Here we describe the current challenges and recent multidisciplinary advancements and opportunities for standardizing next-generation cancer organoid systems.

This Review summarizes limitations in the current techniques used for patient-derived cancer organoid culture and highlights recent advancements and future opportunities for their standardization.

  • Details
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Type
review article
DOI
10.1038/s41563-021-01057-5
Web of Science ID

WOS:000684486600001

Author(s)
LeSavage, Bauer L.
Suhar, Riley A.
Broguiere, Nicolas  
Lutolf, Matthias P.  
Heilshorn, Sarah C.
Date Issued

2022

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

21

Start page

143

End page

159

Subjects

Chemistry, Physical

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Physics, Applied

•

Physics, Condensed Matter

•

Chemistry

•

Materials Science

•

Physics

•

modeling colorectal-cancer

•

patient-derived organoids

•

pluripotent stem-cells

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extracellular-matrix

•

tumor heterogeneity

•

in-vitro

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3d culture

•

growth

•

niche

•

resistance

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPLUT  
Available on Infoscience
August 28, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180901
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