Ovarian cancer is the deadliest cancer of the female reproductive system. Even after undergoing surgery and anti-cancer therapy, most women recur in less than 3 years and eventually show resistance to the treatment. To develop better treatments for these women, we need to investigate and understand how treatment resistance occurs at the cellular level. And to conduct such investigations, the development of research models that better mimic the tumors from the patients is crucial.
Since tumors are not comprised of isolated cancer cells but these are rather in constant communication with other cell types (stromal cells), my first goal was to create a new research model incorporating both cancer cells (grown as stable organoids) and stromal cells from ovarian cancer patients. When this project started, such research model did not exist.
My second goal was to identify the cellular mechanisms of resistance to anti-cancer therapy in ovarian cancer patients and to design new treatments. To do so, I used a technique called single cell RNA sequencing and studied the changes that occur in the cancer cells and the stromal cells of my research models when they are exposed to the anti-cancer therapy given to patients. With this information, I found cellular processes that are unique to the cancer cells that survive the anti-cancer therapy and that are regulated by the stromal cells, and I investigated if such processes could be blocked with additional treatments.