Principal Investigator
Hakho
Lee
Awardee Organization
Massachusetts General Hospital
United States
Fiscal Year
2024
Activity Code
U01
Early Stage Investigator Grants (ESI)
Not Applicable
Project End Date
NIH RePORTER
For more information, see NIH RePORTER Project 5U01CA284982-02
Expanding early cancer detection with high throughput OCEANA - Ovarian Cancer Exosome Analysis with Nanoplasmonic Array
Ovarian cancer (OvCa) remains the most lethal gynecologic cancer in the United States. Early detection through screening, particularly of high-risk populations, is an appealing strategy for timely intervention yet conventional efforts have not improved survival. Extracellular vesicles (EVs; 30-200 nm in diameter) are actively released by cells into circulation, carrying diverse molecular cargo. Capturing this information could provide a real-time window to monitor tumor burden and dynamic molecular changes and potentially OvCa precursor lesions. We aim to advance our translational EV assay for early OvCa diagnosis with a focus on its most lethal subtype, high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). We formed a powerful strategic academic-industry alliance between Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Exosome Diagnostics and have laid out two primary objectives. Technology refinement. We will implement an automated and high-throughput platform, OCEANA (Ovarian Cancer Exosomal Analysis with Nanoplasmonic Array). We will also construct an EV marker panel to enhance the diagnostic power of EV assays. Expanded clinical validation. We will rigorously evaluate OCEANA and EV biomarkers using patient-derived organoids and samples across the clinical spectrum (e.g., benign, early, advanced stages) from a world-class and gynecologic-focused biorepository. We have four Specific Aims to achieve these objectives. Aim 1. We will develop a disk-based cartridge for fast, automated total EV isolation. The underlying technology will be our dual-mode chromatography (DMC) which has demonstrated superior EV extraction from plasma. Aim 2. We will establish an expanded EV-marker panel for HGSOC detection informed by patient-derived organoids and EVs. Specifically, EV protein and mRNA results will be combined to make a multi-analyte marker panel. Aim 3. We will analyze EVs from mice hosting HGSOC patient-derived xenografts to study the relationship between tumor progression and circulating EVs. Aim 4. We will screen circulating EVs in women with benign or malignant ovarian conditions, rigorously evaluating OCEANA's clinical performance. Impact. This project will establish OCEANA as a transformative tool for comprehensive EV analyses. The clinical study will also validate EVs as a potent circulating biomarker for early detection of HGSOC. Ultimately, we envision translating the technology as a monitoring tool for cancer care across research and clinical settings.
Publications
- Landeros C, Oh J, Weissleder R, Lee H. Deep learning pipeline for automated cell profiling from cyclic imaging. Scientific reports. 2024 Oct 9;14(1):23600. PMID: 39384907
- Song J, Cho MH, Cho H, Song Y, Lee SW, Nam HC, Yoon TH, Shin JC, Hong JS, Kim Y, Ekanayake E, Jeon J, You DG, Im SG, Choi GS, Park JS, Carter BC, Balaj L, Seo AN, Miller MA, Park SY, Kang T, Castro CM, Lee H. Amplifying mutational profiling of extracellular vesicle mRNA with SCOPE. Nature biotechnology. 2024 Oct 7. Epub 2024 Oct 7. PMID: 39375445
- Barth I, Lee H. Phase-driven progress in nanophotonic biosensing. Light, science & applications. 2024 Mar 18;13(1):76. PMID: 38494520
- Landeros C, Oh J, Weissleder R, Lee H. Deep Learning Pipeline for Automated Cell Profiling from Cyclic Imaging. Research square. 2023 Dec 18. PMID: 38196620
- Stollmann A, Garcia-Guirado J, Hong JS, Rüedi P, Im H, Lee H, Ortega Arroyo J, Quidant R. Molecular fingerprinting of biological nanoparticles with a label-free optofluidic platform. Nature communications. 2024 May 15;15(1):4109. PMID: 38750038