Investigator
phD · Istituto Regina Elena, Oncogenomic and Epigenetic Unit
Dissecting endometrial cancer complexity in response to standard and targeted therapies
Abstract Endometrial cancer (EC) is one of the most common gynecologic malignancies amongst women worldwide. Its incidence and mortality rates have been increasing in the last decade. In the present work, we built a patient EC-derived organoid (PDOs) platform that faithfully recapitulated tumor phenotype, genomic alterations, and expression profiles of matched-primary cancer tissues. Interestingly, we found that the response of EC-derived PDOs to both standard therapy and a wide range of targeted drugs accordingly to their specific druggable genetic alterations was congruent with that of the originating patients. We also isolated and genomically characterized matched-PDO stromal cells, specifically cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). Unlike PDOs matched CAFs were poorly responsive and underwent to pro-inflammatory senescence upon treatment with standard therapy. Collectively, our findings established a EC-PDOs preclinical platform which allows assessing the therapeutic response of tumor and surrounding tumor microenvironment cellular landscape.
phD
Istituto Regina Elena · Oncogenomic and Epigenetic Unit
phD student
PhD in Genetics and Molecular Biology
Sapienza University of Rome
Degree on Biology Applied to Biomedical Research
Degree in Biological Sciences
Scopus: 24437392100
Researcher Id: J-8182-2016