Emerging immunotherapies quest for better patient stratification in cancer treatment decisions. Moderate response rates of PD-1 inhibition in gastric and esophagogastric junction cancers urge for meaningful human model systems that allow for investigating immune responses ex vivo. Here, the standardized patient-derived tissue culture (PDTC) model was applied to investigate tumor response to the PD-1 inhibitor Nivolumab and the CD3/CD28 t-lymphocyte activator ImmunoCultTM. Resident t-lymphocytes, tumor proliferation and apoptosis, as well as bulk gene expression data were analyzed after 72 h of PD-1 inhibition either as monotherapy or combined with Oxaliplatin or ImmunoCultTM. Individual responses to PD-1 inhibition were found ex vivo and combination with chemotherapy or t-lymphocyte activation led to enhanced antitumoral effects in PDTCs. T-lymphocyte activation as well as the addition of pre-cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells improved PDTC for studying t-lymphocyte and tumor cell communication. These data support the potential of PDTC to investigate immunotherapy ex vivo in gastric and esophagogastric junction cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Hußtegge, M., Hoang, N. A., Rebstock, J., Monecke, A., Gockel, I., Weimann, A., … Körfer, J. (2021). PD-1 inhibition in patient derived tissue cultures of human gastric and gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma. OncoImmunology, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2021.1960729
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