4.6 Article

In Silico Drug Prescription for Targeting Cancer Patient Heterogeneity and Prediction of Clinical Outcome

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers11091361

Keywords

precision medicine; cancer genomics; intra-tumour heterogeneity; in silico prescription; bioinformatics; pharmacogenomics; druggable genome

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)
  2. Marie-Curie Career Integration Grant [CIG334361]
  3. Paradifference Foundation
  4. ISCIII [PT17/0009/0011]
  5. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [PT17/0009/0011]
  6. AEI-MCIU [RETOS RTI2018-097596-B-I00]
  7. Spanish National Institute of Bioinformatics, Bioinformatics platform of the National Institute of Health Carlos III [PT17/0009/0011]
  8. European Structural and Investment Fund

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In silico drug prescription tools for precision cancer medicine can match molecular alterations with tailored candidate treatments. These methodologies require large and well-annotated datasets to systematically evaluate their performance, but this is currently constrained by the lack of complete patient clinicopathological data. Moreover, in silico drug prescription performance could be improved by integrating additional tumour information layers like intra-tumour heterogeneity (ITH) which has been related to drug response and tumour progression. PanDrugs is an in silico drug prescription method which prioritizes anticancer drugs combining both biological and clinical evidence. We have systematically evaluated PanDrugs in the Genomic Data Commons repository (GDC). Our results showed that PanDrugs is able to establish an a priori stratification of cancer patients treated with Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) inhibitors. Patients labelled as responders according to PanDrugs predictions showed a significantly increased overall survival (OS) compared to non-responders. PanDrugs was also able to suggest alternative tailored treatments for non-responder patients. Additionally, PanDrugs usefulness was assessed considering spatial and temporal ITH in cancer patients and showed that ITH can be approached therapeutically proposing drugs or combinations potentially capable of targeting the clonal diversity. In summary, this study is a proof of concept where PanDrugs predictions have been correlated to OS and can be useful to manage ITH in patients while increasing therapeutic options and demonstrating its clinical utility.

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