Effective drug combinations in breast, colon and pancreatic cancer cells

Patricia Jaaks(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Elizabeth A. Coker(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Daniël J. Vis(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Olivia Edwards(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Emma F. Carpenter(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Simonetta M. Leto(Candiolo Cancer Institute), Lisa Dwane(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Francesco Sassi(Candiolo Cancer Institute), Howard Lightfoot(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Syd Barthorpe(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Dieudonne van der Meer(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Wanjuan Yang(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Alexandra Beck(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Tatiana Mironenko(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Caitlin Hall(Wellcome Sanger Institute), James Hall(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Iman Mali(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Laura Richardson(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Charlotte Tolley(Wellcome Sanger Institute), James Morris(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Frances Thomas(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Ermira Lleshi(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Nanne Aben(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Cyril H. Benes(Harvard University), Andrea Bertotti(Candiolo Cancer Institute), Livio Trusolino(Candiolo Cancer Institute), Lodewyk F.A. Wessels(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Mathew J. Garnett(Wellcome Sanger Institute)
Nature
February 23, 2022
Cited by 456Open Access
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Abstract

. The number of possible drug combinations vastly exceeds what could be tested clinically. Efforts to systematically identify active combinations and the tissues and molecular contexts in which they are most effective could accelerate the development of combination treatments. Here we evaluate the potency and efficacy of 2,025 clinically relevant two-drug combinations, generating a dataset encompassing 125 molecularly characterized breast, colorectal and pancreatic cancer cell lines. We show that synergy between drugs is rare and highly context-dependent, and that combinations of targeted agents are most likely to be synergistic. We incorporate multi-omic molecular features to identify combination biomarkers and specify synergistic drug combinations and their active contexts, including in basal-like breast cancer, and microsatellite-stable or KRAS-mutant colon cancer. Our results show that irinotecan and CHEK1 inhibition have synergistic effects in microsatellite-stable or KRAS-TP53 double-mutant colon cancer cells, leading to apoptosis and suppression of tumour xenograft growth. This study identifies clinically relevant effective drug combinations in distinct molecular subpopulations and is a resource to guide rational efforts to develop combinatorial drug treatments.


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