Investigator

Heini Lassus

University Of Helsinki

HLHeini Lassus
Papers(3)
Drug response profile…Ovarian Cancers with …<i>Ex Vivo</i> …
Collaborators(10)
Ralf BützowJie BaoJing TangJohanna TapperJoonas JukonenJukka WestermarckKaisa HuhtinenKirsten NowlanLiisa KauppiMaría Hincapié-Otero
Institutions(4)
University Of HelsinkiUniversity of HelsinkiHelsinki University H…University of Turku

Papers

Drug response profiles in patient-derived cancer cells across histological subtypes of ovarian cancer: real-time therapy tailoring for a patient with low-grade serous carcinoma

AbstractMany efforts are underway to develop novel therapies against the aggressive high-grade serous ovarian cancers (HGSOCs), while our understanding of treatment options for low-grade (LGSOC) or mucinous (MUCOC) of ovarian malignancies is not developing as well. We describe here a functional precision oncology (fPO) strategy in epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC), which involves high-throughput drug testing of patient-derived ovarian cancer cells (PDCs) with a library of 526 oncology drugs, combined with genomic and transcriptomic profiling. HGSOC, LGSOC and MUCOC PDCs had statistically different overall drug response profiles, with LGSOCs responding better to targeted inhibitors than HGSOCs. We identified several subtype-specific drug responses, such as LGSOC PDCs showing high sensitivity to MDM2, ERBB2/EGFR inhibitors, MUCOC PDCs to MEK inhibitors, whereas HGSOCs showed strongest effects with CHK1 inhibitors and SMAC mimetics. We also explored several drug combinations and found that the dual inhibition of MEK and SHP2 was synergistic in MAPK-driven EOCs. We describe a clinical case study, where real-time fPO analysis of samples from a patient with metastatic, chemorefractory LGSOC with a CLU-NRG1 fusion guided clinical therapy selection. fPO-tailored therapy with afatinib, followed by trastuzumab and pertuzumab, successfully reduced tumour burden and blocked disease progression over a five-year period. In summary, fPO is a powerful approach for the identification of systematic drug response differences across EOC subtypes, as well as to highlight patient-specific drug regimens that could help to optimise therapies to individual patients in the future.

Ovarian Cancers with Low CIP2A Tumor Expression Constitute an APR-246–Sensitive Disease Subtype

Abstract Identification of ovarian cancer patient subpopulations with increased sensitivity to targeted therapies could offer significant clinical benefit. We report that 22% of the high-grade ovarian cancer tumors at diagnosis express CIP2A oncoprotein at low levels. Furthermore, regardless of their significantly lower likelihood of disease relapse after standard chemotherapy, a portion of relapsed tumors retain their CIP2A-deficient phenotype. Through a screen for therapeutics that would preferentially kill CIP2A-deficient ovarian cancer cells, we identified reactive oxygen species inducer APR-246, tested previously in ovarian cancer clinical trials. Consistent with CIP2A-deficient ovarian cancer subtype in humans, CIP2A is dispensable for development of MISIIR-Tag–driven mouse ovarian cancer tumors. Nevertheless, CIP2A-null ovarian cancer tumor cells from MISIIR-Tag mice displayed APR-246 hypersensitivity both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, the lack of CIP2A expression hypersensitizes the ovarian cancer cells to APR-246 by inhibition of NF-κB activity. Accordingly, combination of APR-246 and NF-κB inhibitor compounds strongly synergized in killing of CIP2A-positive ovarian cancer cells. Collectively, the results warrant consideration of clinical testing of APR-246 for CIP2A-deficient ovarian cancer tumor subtype patients. Results also reveal CIP2A as a candidate APR-246 combination therapy target for ovarian cancer.

Ex Vivo Immuno-Oncology Platform Reveals Spatial T-cell Infiltration Patterns Linked to ATR Inhibition Responses in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer

Abstract Identifying new therapeutic approaches in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC) requires the development of more accurate preclinical models that replicate the patient-specific tumor and its microenvironment. To address this, we established immunocompetent patient-derived cultures (iPDC) for HGSC, cultured on a physiologically relevant human omentum gel matrix. We developed a high-throughput platform that combines drug testing, histologic analysis, genomic profiling, single-cell studies, and spatial biomarker discovery. Our results from 47 tumors showed that iPDCs recapitulated the tumor genomic and histologic characteristics while also retaining the intratumoral immune cells. The iPDC treatment responses correlated significantly with the patients’ clinical treatment responses. Using iPDCs and single-cell RNA sequencing, we identified potentially effective therapeutic options for patients with recurrent HGSC linked to distinct tumor cell states and mechanisms of resistance. High-throughput drug response profiling with single-cell imaging identified ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related inhibitor (ATRi) combined with an immunotherapy targeting autotaxin as a promising new combination treatment for HGSC. Using hyperplexed imaging and spatial analysis, we discovered that ATRi responses were associated with significant increases in both intra- and peritumoral T-cell infiltration, particularly in PD-1+ CD8+ T cells. Additionally, the ATRi-induced reactivation of CD8+ T cells was linked to spatial interactions with replication stress–positive tumor cells. Thus, our iPDC platform presents a representative high-throughput ex vivo model to advance precision oncology in HGSC, uncovering the ATRi-immunotherapy combination as a potentially effective therapeutic option for clinical translation.

3Papers
42Collaborators