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New paper-based technology could transform cancer drug testing

11 Dec 2025
New paper-based technology could transform cancer drug testing

Researchers at New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) have developed Spheromatrix, a simple and low-cost technology that enables tumour models to be grown, frozen, and stored for future use in cancer drug testing.

Spheromatrix is made from specially engineered philtre paper patterned to support the growth of tumour spheroids in a controlled, reproducible manner.

Unlike conventional approaches, which are expensive, complex, and cannot be preserved, this platform enables researchers to build biobanks of “off-the-shelf” tumour models that can be thawed and tested on demand.

The research team that conducted the study is led by Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Bioengineering Mohammad A.

Qasaimeh, with first author Postdoctoral Associate Ayoub Glia and colleagues at NYUAD’s Advanced Microfluidics and Microdevices Laboratory (AMMLab).

“Spheromatrix represents an important step forward in cancer research,” said Qasaimeh, Associate Professor of Engineering at NYU Abu Dhabi.

“Its fibre-based structure provides a biocompatible environment for cells, letting tumour models behave more like real cancers. Preserving these models for long-term use speeds up preclinical testing, reduces reliance on animal models, and opens new possibilities for patient-focused research.”

The team tested Spheromatrix with commercial chemotherapy drugs on brain tumour models.

Preserved tumours responded closely to real patient cancers, demonstrating the platform’s potential to provide reproducible, realistic, and scalable systems for drug screening.

“Our goal was to design a platform that is simple, reliable, and affordable, while addressing a major bottleneck in cancer drug development,” said Glia.

“By engineering paper to support tumour spheroids, we can grow, freeze, and reuse models for multiple experiments. We are now exploring the use of patient-derived samples to enable more personalised cancer therapies.”

Spheromatrix could reduce costs and timelines for preclinical testing, provide humane alternatives to animal models, and pave the way for patient-focused precision oncology.

Times Higher Education ranks NYU among the world’s top 31 universities, making NYU Abu Dhabi the highest globally ranked university in the UAE.

Alumni achievements include 24 Rhodes Scholars, underscoring the calibre of talent nurtured at the University.

On the faculty and research front, NYUAD now has four Nobel Laureates and established more than 90 faculty labs and projects, producing over 9,500 internationally recognised publications.

According to the Nature Index, NYUAD ranks number one in the UAE for publications in the world’s top science journals.

Article: Spheromatrix: a paper-based platform for scalable 3D tumor model generation, cryopreservation, and high-throughput drug assessment

Source: New York University