Identifying and prioritizing treatment options based on a patient’s profile of genetic alterations is a major challenge in personalized cancer medicine. A new data-driven approach called PanDrugs can help to this end. This new computational resource has been developed by researchers from the Bioinformatics Unit at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO) and is described in a paper published in Genome Medicine.
A large majority of cancers have many genetic alterations whose biological and clinical relevance are unclear. Several tools have been developed to identify clinically actionable genomic alterations and to suggest targeted therapies, but they have limitations, and there’s still a gap between raw genomic data and clinical usefulness.
To address this, researchers led by Fátima Al-Shahrour, head of the Bioinformatics Unit at the CNIO, developed PanDrugs. “The main novelty introduced in this methodology compared with current tools is the broadening of the search space to provide therapeutic options,” explains Al-Shahrour.
In other words, PanDrugs suggests treatments for direct targets (e.g. genes that contribute to disease phenotype and can be directly targeted by a drug) and biomarkers (e.g. genes that have a genetic status associated with drug response but the protein product is not the drug target itself). PanDrugs also integrates a knowledge-based systems biology layer that automatically inspects biological circuits, expanding cancer candidate therapies from beyond limited cancer-related gene lists to the whole druggable pathway.
“This novel strategy (called ‘pathway member’) extends the treatment opportunities of cancer patients by enriching the therapeutic arsenal against tumours and opens new avenues for personalized medicine,” says Al-Shahrour. Thanks to pathway member strategy, the paper describes how PanDrugs is able to identify treatments used in clinical practice that might benefit prostate, breast and colorectal cancer patients without druggable cancer driver altered genes.
The PanDrugs database represents a remarkable contribution. “This database is the largest public repository of drug-target associations available from well-known targeted therapies to preclinical drugs. Current version of PanDrugs integrates data from 24 primary sources and supports >56000 drug-target associations.”
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