Mevalonate pathway activation in Ewing sarcoma reveals a 3D-specific synergy between statins and BCL-xL inhibition
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Bone sarcomas are rare and aggressive pediatric cancers with limited progress in targeted therapy development, in part due to the poor physiological relevance of conventional two-dimensional (2D) culture systems used for preclinical testing. To address this gap, we developed a standardized three-dimensional (3D) culture and drug-testing platform for Ewing sarcoma (ES) and osteosarcoma (OS) that more accurately recapitulates in vivo tumor biology. Across 3D spheroids, bioprinted constructs, and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) cultures, we observed a consistent activation and dependency on the mevalonate pathway in ES. Leveraging this platform, we identified a selective therapeutic synergy between statins, which inhibit mevalonate pathway flux, and BCL-xL inhibitors, a vulnerability that was not detectable in 2D cultures. These findings highlight the mevalonate pathway as a targetable metabolic dependency in ES and demonstrate how physiologically grounded 3D models can uncover clinically actionable treatment strategies that remain hidden in traditional 2D systems. Our findings show that 3D tumor models can expose actionable metabolic vulnerabilities obscured by traditional approaches, supporting their use in rational combination therapy discovery for aggressive pediatric sarcomas.