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Extraordinary clinical response to ibrutinib in low-grade ovarian cancer guided by organoid drug testing

Authors :
Heidi J. Gray
Payel Chatterjee
Rachele Rosati
Lauren R. Appleyard
Grace J. Durenberger
Robert L. Diaz
Hallie A. Swan
Danielle Peretti
Maddy Pollastro
Trevor Ainge
Katannya Kapeli
Shalini Pereira
Astrid L. Margossian
Kalyan Banda
Barbara A. Goff
Elizabeth M. Swisher
Brady Bernard
Christopher J. Kemp
Carla Grandori
Source :
npj Precision Oncology. 7
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Low-grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC) typically responds poorly to standard platinum-based chemotherapy and new therapeutic approaches are needed. We describe a remarkable response to targeted therapy in a patient with platinum-resistant, advanced LGSOC who had failed standard-of-care chemotherapy and two surgeries. The patient was in rapid decline and entering hospice care on home intravenous (i.v.) opioid analgesics and a malignant bowel obstruction requiring a G-tube. Genomic analysis of the patient’s tumor did not indicate obvious therapeutic options. In contrast, a CLIA-certified drug sensitivity assay of an organoid culture derived from the patient’s tumor identified several therapeutic choices, including Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor ibrutinib, as well as the EGFR inhibitors afatinib and erlotinib. Following off-label administration of daily ibrutinib as monotherapy, the patient had an exceptional clinical turnaround over the following 65 weeks with normalization of CA-125 levels, resolution of the malignant bowel obstruction, halting of pain medications, and improvement of performance status from ECOG 3 to ECOG 1. After 65 weeks of stable disease, the patient’s CA-125 levels began to rise, at which point the patient discontinued ibrutinib and began taking afatinib as monotherapy. The patient’s CA-125 levels remained stable for an additional 38 weeks but due to anemia and rising CA-125 levels, the patient switched to erlotinib and is currently being monitored. This case highlights the clinical utility of ex vivo drug testing of patient-derived tumor organoids as a new functional precision medicine approach to identify effective personalized therapies for patients who have failed standard-of-care treatments.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
2397768X
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
npj Precision Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5ad1089cd06c637ed16a591915b81f92