Experts have created a microfluidic cell culture device that allows the direct, real-time observation of the development of drug resistance in cancer cells.

TOP INSIGHT
In response to chemotherapy, cancer cells can become drug resistant in just 10 days. Developing a new drug can take around 10 years and cost more than billions. But all of this work and investment is meaningless if patients can’t get access to new treatments.
"Current therapies are developed through in vitro drug screening and tissue culture techniques, which can detect initial drug sensitivity but are not designed to detect and measure drug resistance. Similarly, in vivo experiments in mice are designed to study sensitivity to therapies and not mechanisms of resistance, because the animals succumb to the cancer."
Co-author Dr Gonzalo Torga, from Johns Hopkins Medical Institute, Baltimore, said: "Animal testing is the most effective way to test the clinical response to new drugs, but it can be extremely costly and take many months.
"Our system is an in-vitro, self-contained, microfluidic cell culture system. It reproducibly creates the complex microenvironments in which cancer cells develop." The team's system acts as an 'evolution accelerator', allowing the study of key interactions between host cells and cancer cells, and their response to the drug, to be carried out in a much shorter timeframe.
Dr Torga said: "The system allows us to carry out continuous observation of the interactions of multiple cell types at cell-by-cell resolution, and observe the development of drug resistance in the cancer cells in real time. "Significantly, our results show that in response to chemotherapy, cancer cells can become drug resistant in just 10 days."
Additionally, the device can be fitted onto a standard epifluoresence microscope without the cost and inconvenience of a full incubating enclosure, and carry out three different experiments simultaneously over a period of several weeks of continuous real-time observation.
Source-Eurekalert
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