Lab-Grown Thymic Organoids Show Promise in Melanoma Treatment and Immune System Restoration

November 10, 2025
Lab-Grown Thymic Organoids Show Promise in Melanoma Treatment and Immune System Restoration
  • A peer-reviewed study from Tolerance Bio reports that lab-grown human thymic organoids can restore immune function and suppress melanoma tumor growth in mice, pointing to a potential personalized cancer treatment and immune regeneration approach.

  • Researchers used patient-derived iPSC thymic cells implanted into immune-deficient humanized mice alongside matching patient tumor tissue, leading to slower tumor growth, fewer viable melanoma cells, more activated T cells, and signs of enhanced tumor clearance.

  • The study, titled “Patient-specific autologous thymic organoids support functional T-cell education leading to antitumor activity in humanized mice with melanoma xenografts,” was published in Cancer Research Communications and involved researchers Antonio Jimeno and Holger A. Russ.

  • Jimeno and Russ say the thymic organoid model marks a significant advance for personalized cancer models, potential cell therapies, and more targeted drug and vaccine development.

  • Tolerance Bio leadership stresses that iPSC-derived thymic cells could reconstitute a functional T cell system in vivo and signals readiness to move toward clinical development, including pre-IND activities for an off-the-shelf thymic cell product.

  • Overall, the work tackles a major limitation in humanized mouse models by adding functional thymic organoids to improve immune-tumor cell interactions, enabling more accurate testing of immune therapies.

Summary based on 1 source


Get a daily email with more Science stories

More Stories