Computational repurposing of oncology drugs through off‐target drug binding interactions from pharmacological databases

Author:

Walpole Imogen R.1ORCID,Zaman Farzana Y1,Zhao Peinan2,Marshall Vikki M.2,Lin Frank P.34,Thomas David M.4,Shackleton Mark12,Antolin Albert A.56,Ameratunga Malaka12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Oncology The Alfred Hospital Melbourne Australia

2. School of Translational Medicine Monash University Melbourne Australia

3. NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre University of Sydney Sydney Australia

4. Garvan Institute of Medical Research St Vincent's Clinical School Faculty of Medicine UNSW Darlinghurst Australia

5. ProCURE, Catalan Institute of Oncology (ICO) Oncobell, Bellvitge Institute for Biomedical Research (IDIBELL) Barcelona Spain

6. The Division of Cancer Therapeutics Center for Cancer Drug Discovery The Institute of Cancer Research London UK

Abstract

AbstractPurposeSystematic repurposing of approved medicines for another indication may accelerate drug development in oncology. We present a strategy combining biomarker testing with drug repurposing to identify new treatments for patients with advanced cancer.MethodsTumours were sequenced with the Illumina TruSight Oncology 500 (TSO‐500) platform or the FoundationOne CDx panel. Mutations were screened by two medical oncologists and pathogenic mutations were categorised referencing literature. Variants of unknown significance were classified as potentially pathogenic using plausible mechanisms and computational prediction of pathogenicity. Gain of function (GOF) mutations were evaluated through repurposing databases Probe Miner (PM), Broad Institute Drug Repurposing Hub (Broad Institute DRH) and TOPOGRAPH. GOF mutations were repurposing events if identified in PM, not indexed in TOPOGRAPH and excluding mutations with a known Food and Drug Administration (FDA)‐approved biomarker. The computational repurposing approach was validated by evaluating its ability to identify FDA‐approved biomarkers. The total repurposable genome was identified by evaluating all possible gene‐FDA drug‐approved combinations in the PM dataset.ResultsThe computational repurposing approach was accurate at identifying FDA therapies with known biomarkers (94%). Using next‐generation sequencing molecular reports (n = 94), a meaningful percentage of patients (14%) could have an off‐label therapeutic identified. The frequency of theoretical drug repurposing events in The Cancer Genome Atlas pan‐cancer dataset was 73% of the samples in the cohort.ConclusionA computational drug repurposing approach may assist in identifying novel repurposing events in cancer patients with no access to standard therapies. Further validation is needed to confirm a precision oncology approach using drug repurposing.

Publisher

Wiley

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