National Post

Researcher­s can use tumour to treat it

ISRAEL

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Israeli researcher­s have used brain cancer patients’ own cells in a form of 3D printing material to make a model of their tumour to test the efficacy of potential treatments before using them for real inside the body.

The scientists extract “a chunk” of the tumour from the brain of a patient with glioblasto­ma — an aggressive cancer with a poor prognosis — and use it to print a model matching their MRI scans, said Prof. Ronit Satchifain­aro, who led the research at Tel Aviv University.

The patient’s blood is then pumped through the printed tumour, made with a compound that mimics the brain, followed by a drug or therapeuti­c treatment.

While previous research has used “bioprintin­g” to simulate cancer environmen­ts, the Tel Aviv University researcher­s say they are first to print a “viable” tumour.

“We have about two weeks (to) test all the different therapies that we would like to evaluate (on) that specific tumour, and get back with an answer — which treatment is predicted to be the best fit,” Satchi-fainaro said.

A treatment is deemed promising if the printed tumour shrinks or if it lowers metabolic activity against control groups.

Researcher­s have often 3D printed tumour models to plan for surgery, but more recent innovation­s have focused on bioprintin­g, which uses live cells as a sort of ink to build up the layers.

Ofra Benny, who leads similar research at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said the use of a patient’s own cells to develop 3D tumour models could be “a game-changer.”

“The more physiologi­cal mimicry you create, the better prediction you get in terms of how drug treatments will work on the actual tumour in the patient’s body,” she said.

The research was published in the journal Science Advances.

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