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organonachip – Progress in Research

3D personalized model of biliary tract cancer

It is only a few centimeters in size and can be held between two fingers, but in the micro-channels carved inside it, it’s hidden a three-dimensional and highly faithful model of a biliary tract cancer called cholangiocarcinoma, complete with its tumor microenvironment.

This 3D model is built starting from a sample of patient’s cancer cells and thus it represents a patient-specific “organ-on-chip”: a technology made possible only through a multidisciplinary approach that merges biomedicine, physics and engineering.

The innovative prototype is the result of the collaboration between Ana Lleo De Nalda, Full Professor at Humanitas University and head of the Hepatobiliary Immunopathology Laboratory at Humanitas Research Hospital, and Marco Rasponi, Associate Professor at Politecnico di Milano and head of the Laboratory of Microfluidics and Biomimetic Microsystems.

The study was made possible thanks to the collaboration with the group of Prof. Guido Torzilli, Director of the Department of General Surgery and head of the Hepatobiliary Surgery Unit of the IRCCS Istituto Clinico Humanitas.

The ultimate goal of the device is to accelerate research on cholangiocarcinoma by providing a new laboratory model that better mimics what we observe in patients. At the same time, it will help advancing precision medicine, since it could be potentially used as a personalized drug-testing platform, helping predict patients’ response to therapies.

Ana Lleo and Marco Rasponi

The study was funded by AIRC – the Italian Foundation for Cancer Research, and was published in the Journal of Hepatology Reports.

What is cholangiocarcinoma

Cholangiocarcinoma is a rare cancer of the liver (it affects about 5,500 people in Italy alone, each year) and it derives from a malignant transformation of cholangiocytes, the cells lining the biliary tract.

Unfortunately, the disease is often diagnosed at an advanced stage, because patients show very few symptoms. This is also why treatments are often ineffective: at the time of diagnosis, only 10-30% of patients are eligible to undergo surgical removal of the tumor.

Precisely because of the reduced therapeutic options and high mortality of cholangiocarcinoma, we need new in vitro models that can recapitulate the characteristics of the disease and in particular the interaction between tumor cells and cells of the immune system, which play a key role in its progression and response to drugs.

Ana Lleo

A 3D platform for advancing research and personalized medicine

Now, for the first time, researchers from Humanitas and Politecnico di Milano developed a personalized 3D model of the disease.

It is a microfluidic chip a few centimeters in size. Inside the device, in the micrometer channels realized using advanced photolithographic techniques, we seeded cancer cells sampled from patients affected by cholangiocarcinoma. The cells successfully reproduced the tumor architecture in vitro.

Marco Rasponi

In a series of experiments, the team of researchers demonstrated that the device faithfully recapitulates what we observe in individual patients, both in terms of T-cell activation, that correlates with tumor infiltration, and in terms of therapeutic response to different drugs, based on the characteristics of cancer recurrence.

We are very happy with the result obtained, which was only possible thanks to the combination of different expertise and knowledge.

The next steps will be to further optimize and improve the device, both as a research model and as a personalized drug-testing platform.

Ana Lleo and Marco Rasponi

We want to add cells of innate immune system, such as macrophages, which play an important role in tumor progression, and introduce micro-pumps that can mimic blood flow and vascularization. We also need to test it on larger groups of patients, to confirm its ability to recapitulate the phenomena we observe in the clinical setting.

DIANA: studying drugs for brain by miniaturized platform

The Politecnico di Milano has developed an innovative technological device, for industrial use, aimed at the study of new drugs for the treatment of brain disorders such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. This is the main result of the European project DIANA (Organ-on-a-chip Drug screenIng device to tArget braiN diseAse), funded in 2019 by the Proof-of Concept call of the ERC (European Research Council).

DIANA brought together universities and companies in a consortium between the Politecnico di Milano and the innovative SME Neuro-Zone srl, specialized in discovery activities to support the development of drugs in the field of neurological and neurodegenerative diseases. The project was enhanced by the involvement of Diego Albani, researcher in neuroscience at the Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri IRCCS in Milan, an expert in innovative pharmacological approaches for neurodegenerative diseases.

The Chip4DBrain platform developed by DIANA is based on a state-of-the-art technology known as” organ-on-a-chip “that allows you to reproduce complex organ functions on systems the size of a microscope slide.

Carmen Giordano, Professor of Bioengineering at the Politecnico di Milano.

This is a further step towards the development of evolved in vitro models, which can reproduce some of the key characteristics of biological systems, such as the three-dimensionality or the simultaneous presence of different types of cells, just as it is in our brain, to evaluate the potential of a new drug to cross the blood brain barrier and effectively target the brain.

This innovative miniaturized platform is able to integrate in a single in vitro system the blood-brain barrier, which protects our brain from the aggression of molecules and external agents, and a model of brain tissue.

Chip4D Brain has also allowed the implementation of cellular models of the blood brain and brain barrier, already in use at Neuro-Zone, making them closer to the biological profile of a patient thanks to the use of commercial human stem cells.

In an international scenario where the restrictions or ethical assessments towards the use of animal models also in the field of neuroscience are very complex, predictive and advanced in vitro models are increasingly urgent.

The mission that DIANA has faced is highly topical: in the coming decades, brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease will have a significant increase, but unfortunately the development of effective drugs requires a ten-year process, investments of billions of euros to facing a failure rate, which for Alzheimer’s disease alone is close to 95%.

The project DIANA has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, under Grant Agreement No. 899431.

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