Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy
Differentiating effective from ineffective neuroprotective strategies
PNS-3D technology integrates human iPSC-derived sensory neurons and primary Schwann cells to model functional deficits associated with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN).
The technology replicates neurotoxic responses, such as those induced by vincristine, and supports evaluation of neuroprotective strategies, including SARM1 inhibition. It enables detection of dose-dependent effects on axonal integrity and the onset of neurotoxicity, providing a powerful tool for assessing therapeutic efficacy and optimizing dosing strategies.

SARM1 inhibitor treatment effects over time across electrophysiology (left), neurite-growth metrics (middle), and the combination of both (right). While vincristine alone causes swift declines in function and morphology, NB-7 and WX-02-37 confer prolonged protection across endpoints compared to DSRM-3716, which mirrors the positive-control decline.