Tumor-reactive T cells (TRTs) are critical for anti-tumor immunity but are incompletely captured by current assays, which fail to reproduce tumor-specific antigen diversity. Here, we show that multiplex functional profiling of patient-derived tumor organoid-T cell co-cultures (PDOTs) enables robust identification of TRTs across CD8, CD4, and double-negative (DN) T cell populations. Single activation markers underestimated TRT responses, whereas integrated analysis revealed broader functional repertoire. MHCI blockade abrogated CD8 and DN TRT responses while preserving CD4 reactivity, supporting antigen-dependent recognition across T cell lineages. Tumor PDO expressed MHCI and MHCII, and PDOTs enabled generation and detection of TRTs from peripheral blood. PD1 blockade induced heterogeneous responses, enhancing CD8 and DN activity and unexpectedly augmenting CD4 reactivity. PDOTs further identified additional inhibitory pathways whose therapeutic targeting in combination with PD1 blockade increased TRT responses. These findings establish PDOTs as a platform to identify TRTs and functionally stratify patient-specific tumor-T cell responses to checkpoint immunotherapy.
Cognitive Dissonance–Based Priming Intervention: Randomized Encouragement With in-the-Wild Phishing Simulation Attack in Health Care
Background: Phishing remains a dominant initial attack vector in health care, exploiting psychological factors such as urgency and authority. Despite extensive investment in technical controls



