The National - News

Abu Dhabi research will improve the testing of cancer drugs

- DANIEL BARDSLEY

Researcher­s in Abu Dhabi developed a new paper-based method to create and preserve small lab-grown tumours on which anti-cancer drugs can be tested.

Scientists are likely to get more accurate results when they test drugs on threedimen­sional tumours, compared with other commonly used methods, researcher­s at New York University Abu Dhabi said.

While small 3D tumours are already being grown and used in laboratory tests, this new technique offers an improved way to create them in large numbers and store them at low temperatur­es for future use, researcher­s said.

The technique involves growing 3D cancer tumours that can be as little as 0.1 millimetre­s in diameter on filter paper – similar to coffee filters.

The tumours can be produced in large numbers at one location and stored, before being shipped to laboratori­es and used for drug tests at a later date.

“You can roll the paper and put it in liquid nitrogen and store it for the future,” said Mohammad Qasaimeh, an NYUAD assistant professor of mechanical and biomedical engineerin­g, in whose laboratory the work was done.

“When you want to test your drug, you retrieve these papers, these 3D arrays.”

Currently, potential anti-cancer drugs are often tested on two-dimensiona­l sheets of cells, but these often give unreliable results.

In their paper in the scientific journal Lab on a Chip, the NYUAD team described such sheets of cells as overly simplified.

Dr Qasaimeh said 80 per cent of prospectiv­e anti-cancer drugs would fail.

“They will show positive effects on 2D cells, but fail with animal tests or clinical trials.”

Dr Qasaimeh said 3D tumours were increasing­ly being used instead of 2D sheets of cells and in some instances, instead of animal tests.

“Although animal models may give insight into key biological responses, the anatomy and physiology of animals are profoundly different from those of humans, and there are ethical concerns regarding their use in research,” the NYUAD experts wrote. Their technique, described in a paper titled Cryo-preservabl­e Arrays of Paper-based 3D Tumour Models for High Throughput Drug Screening, uses tiny “microspots” on the paper.

Small aggregatio­ns of cancer cells are able to form on these microspots.

To see how effective their method was, the researcher­s grew 3D breast cancer tumours and tested out a widely used cancer chemothera­py drug, cisplatin.

Tests using the 3D tumours accurately indicated how well the drug worked.

Paper has emerged as an “attractive, simple tool” for growing 3D cell cultures, helped by the nature of cellulose – the main structural chemical of plant cell walls.

Cellulose fibres create an appropriat­e “niche” for 3D groups of cells to grow. Until now, however, there has also been a lack of “off-the-shelf” paper-based methods to grow and preserve small 3D tumours.

Their methods, the NYUAD team said, involved simple, scalable and inexpensiv­e processes.

The researcher­s said their method could also be applied to personalis­ed or precision medicine, which tailors treatment to the genetic characteri­stics of a patient’s tumour. An emerging way to treat cancer, this improves the effectiven­ess of treatments and reduces side effects.

Other researcher­s behind the new study include Bisan Samara, a former research assistant in Dr Qasaimeh’s laboratory and the lead author of the paper.

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 ?? Getty; NYU Abu Dhabi ?? NYUAD’s research could help to improve developmen­t of cancer drugs by using three-dimensiona­l tumours
Getty; NYU Abu Dhabi NYUAD’s research could help to improve developmen­t of cancer drugs by using three-dimensiona­l tumours

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