Abstract
The use of existing drugs for new therapeutic applications, commonly referred to as drug repositioning, is a way for fast and cost-efficient drug discovery. Drug repositioning in oncology is commonly initiated by in vitro experimental evidence that a drug exhibits anticancer cytotoxicity. Any independent verification that the observed effects in vitro may be valid in a clinical setting, and that the drug could potentially affect patient survival in vivo is of paramount importance. Despite considerable recent efforts in computational drug repositioning, none of the studies have considered patient survival information in modelling the potential of existing/new drugs in the management of cancer. Therefore, we have developed DRUGSURV; this is the first computational tool to estimate the potential effects of a drug using patient survival information derived from clinical cancer expression data sets. DRUGSURV provides statistical evidence that a drug can affect survival outcome in particular clinical conditions to justify further investigation of the drug anticancer potential and to guide clinical trial design. DRUGSURV covers both approved drugs (∼1700) as well as experimental drugs (∼5000) and is freely available at http://www.bioprofiling.de/drugsurv.
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Main
Drug repositioning (application of approved drugs to new therapeutic indications) is currently widely used because of the reduced development costs and simplicity of drug approval procedure. The availability of a vast amount of experimental data covering various diseases has stimulated computational efforts to identify novel potential indications for established drugs.1, 2, 3, 4, 5 The computational principles of drug repositioning are based on a polypharmacology paradigm:6 the drugs are considered in the context of all proteins (genes) affected upon treatment (i.e., the drug signature), and specific diseases are modelled by the multiple genes involved/perturbed in the disease state (i.e., disease signature). Significant similarity between drug and disease signatures is indicative of the potential application of the drug to treat the disease (Figure 1).1, 2, 3
Gene expression data were a primary source of information used by most computational approaches. The sets of genes that are up- and downregulated in a disease state compared with a normal state were used as a gene signature of a disease.1, 2, 4 On the other hand, expression data from human cell lines treated with a broad range of approved drugs has been used to derive genes affected by the drugs. The linkage between a drug and a disease is computed as similarity between the drug and the disease gene signatures.1, 2 Different studies varied in principles to compute similarity. Some of them additionally incorporate gene pathway information.2
In oncology, effect on patient survival outcome is a key criterion of drug efficiency in clinical trials. However, none of the studies have considered patient survival information in modelling the potential of existing/new drugs in the management of cancer. Therefore, we have developed DRUGSURV; this is the first computational tool to estimate the potential effects of a drug using patient survival information derived from clinical cancer expression data sets. In contrast to other approaches, DRUGSURV uses genes significantly associated (P-value<0.01) with patient survival as a cancer signature specific for a cancer type or clinical condition studied in a particular data set (Figure 2b). At the moment, DRUGSURV covers 44 independent clinical cancer expression data sets (in most cases each data set contains >100 patients annotated with survival information).
DRUGSURV covers both FDA approved drugs (∼1700) and experimental drugs (∼5000). The coverage of drugs by DRUGSURV significantly exceeds any previous efforts in the field. Drug signature is defined based on known drug targets. This information is integrated from DrugBank7 and Pubchem Bioassays8 databases. The proteins that are known targets of a drug, or involved in the drug transport/metabolism, or have been reported to be inhibited by the drug in high-throughput screening chemical assays (Pubchem Bioassays) are referred to as direct drug targets (Figure 2a). We also use the term indirect drug targets to refer to the proteins that interact with the direct drug targets according to the IntAct database.9
DRUGSURV is incorporated in the bioprofiling.de analytical portal for high-throughput cell biology10 and is freely available at http://www.bioprofiling.de/drugsurv. DRUGSURV provides multiple query options to explore systematically the effect of genes, which are known to be modulated upon drug treatment on survival in different cancers and clinical conditions. The user can query interested drug, specific cancer or explore any gene as a potential anticancer target. We demonstrate that DRUGSURV validates therapeutic indications for known cancer drugs. DRUGSURV also suggests that the antipsychotic agent, thioridazine, recently demonstrated in vitro to selectively target cancer stem cells,11 could also be effective in vivo: there is a significant proportion of thioridazine targets associated with patient survival in several cancer expression data sets.
Results
Thioridazine: antipsychotic to anticancer agent
Originally thioridazine was positioned as a phenothiazine antipsychotic and has been used in the management of psychoses, including schizophrenia, and in the control of severely disturbed or agitated behaviour. It has been widely accepted that thioridazine blocks postsynaptic mesolimbic dopaminergic D1 and D2 receptors in the brain, blocks alpha-adrenergic effects, depresses the release of hypothalamic and hypophyseal hormones and is believed to depress the reticular activating system.7
Very recently, thioridazine was shown to selectively target cancer stem cells.11 Thioridazine reduced the ability of human acute myeloid leukaemia samples to proliferate and to self-renew, as shown by a decrease in both the ability of the treated cells to form colonies in vitro and in the efficiency of transplantation into recipient mice.12 The anticancer properties of thioridazine have also been shown in several other previous studies,13 but thioridazine may become particularly important because the selective targeting of cancer stem cells offers promise for a new generation of therapeutics with anticancer potential.12
Thioridazine is known to act through dopamine receptors and this was a primary hypothesis while searching for a mechanism for thioridazine’s anticancer activity.11, 12 Data from recent high-throughput screens indicate that thioridazine inhibits about 20 proteins, which are considered to be off target, including those that are known to be associated with tumour progression, such as EGFR. First, this suggests that thioridazine modulates more genes than previously considered. Second, DRUGSURV shows that a statistically significant proportion of these indirect targets affect patient survival in various expression data sets derived from various cancers (Table 1).
The results in Table 1 provide additional independent statistical evidence that thioridazine could have potential therapeutic effects in patients. For example, in the ‘chronic lymphocytic leukaemia’ data set, 86 (out of 502) indirect thioridazine targets are significantly associated with survival. In the ‘multiple myeloma’ data set, 55 (out of 502) indirect thioridazine targets are significantly associated with survival. DRUGSURV visualization of the ‘drug-data set’ model (Figure 3) simplifies our understanding of the potential anticancer mechanism of thioridazine and suggests that a major impact of thioridazine on cancer could be mediated by interaction with EGFR and FYN genes. Although expression of EGFR and FYN genes are rarely associated with survival directly, both EGFR and FYN interact with multiple genes, which do affect survival in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and multiple myeloma.
DRUGSURV: validation therapeutic indications for known cancer drugs
Breast cancer is one of the most well-studied cancer types. DRUGSURV incorporates 17 independent clinical expression breast cancer data sets, which model various specific clinical conditions. We used breast cancer as an example to demonstrate that DRUGSURV validates therapeutic indications for well-established cancer drugs.
Among the top 10 drugs suggested by DRUGSURV (based on the indirect drug targets) to be potential breast cancer treatments, 6 are well-stablished anticancer drugs (Table 2). Tamoxifen and mitoxantrone are currently commonly used for the treatment of breast cancer, whereas danazol is used for the treatment of benign breast disorders (which are important risk factors for breast cancer14), and has been tested in clinical trials for the treatment of advanced breast cancer. It was concluded that danazol is an effective agent in patients with advanced breast cancer, but the response rate is inferior to that of other agents, such as tamoxifen.15
Sunitinib, erlotinib and sorafenib are tyrosine kinase inhibitors, which have been approved for the treatment of different solid tumours. However, none of them has been approved for the treatment of breast cancer, although multiple preclinical studies have suggested their potential as likely breast cancer agents in human patients. For example, erlotinib was reported to inhibit tumour cell proliferation in hormone receptor-positive breast cancer and to induce breast cancer regression.16, 17 Sorafenib has been assessed in phase IIB trials with Capecitabine for locally advanced or metastatic human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer. Addition of sorafenib to capecitabine improved progression-free survival in patients with HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, although with unacceptable toxicity for many patients.18
Sunitinib has demonstrated potential for the treatment of breast cancer in multiple preclinical studies, involving the human breast cancer MX-1 xenograft model, where in combination with docetaxel, doxorubicin or fluorouracil it enhanced the antitumour activity of the chemotherapeutic agents and increased survival.19 Sunitinib also inhibited osteolysis and tumour growth in a mouse model of breast cancer metastatic to bone.20 However, Sunitinib failed in a randomized phase III study, which investigated whether sunitinib plus docetaxel improved clinical outcomes for patients with (HER2)/neu-negative advanced breast cancer versus docetaxel alone.21 Interestingly, DRUGSURV is able to predict this outcome. The only breast cancer data set where indirect targets of sunitinib were depleted among genes associated with survival is data set GSE3521, which investigated patients with distant metastases and poor outcomes. Patients in the data set were annotated with HER2 status and 72% of them were HER2-negative. Therefore, DRUGSURV indicates that clinical conditions modelled in the data set GSE3521 at the molecular level involve genes that are not modulated by sunitinib and, therefore, treatment with sunitinib is not expected to result in any benefit.
Finally, bithionol, hexachlorophene and vitamin A are three top-rated drugs by DRUGSURV, which have never been used as anticancer agents. Hexachlorophene is a chlorinated bisphenol antiseptic with a bacteriostatic action against Gram-positive organisms. Bithionol was shown to cause serious skin disorders and was withdrawn from the market in 1967. Both hexachlorophene and bithionol were reported to exhibit anticancer cell cytotoxicity22, 23 but have never been extensively studied for anticancer properties.
Discussion
In most studies, the novel anticancer therapeutic effect of new/established drugs is usually demonstrated in vitro, and there will always remain doubt whether the anticancer potential is still manifest in vivo. Clinical trials are very expensive and time consuming, but remain the only way to validate drug efficiency in vivo. Before embarking on the time and expense of a clinical trial, however, any additional, and more easily obtainable, evidence that the observed drug effect in vitro will also be observed (or not) in vivo would be of paramount importance. DRUGSURV is a tool, which is likely to provide such statistical evidence.
In contrast to other similar studies, DRUGSURV exploits patient survival information. In oncology, the effect on patient survival outcome is a key criterion of drug efficiency. From this standpoint, modelling cancer signatures with genes that are significantly associated with survival is more direct in comparison to previous approaches. Availability of data sets that model very specific clinical conditions provides a possibility to estimate drug efficiency in patients with specific cancer subtypes. For example, DRUGSURV would be able to predict the inefficiency of sunitinib in patients with (HER2)/neu-negative advanced breast cancer (see Results).
DRUGSURV implements as ‘drug signature’ known direct drug targets inferred from DrugBank and PubChem data. Previous studies have inferred drug signatures from databases containing gene expression data for cell lines treated with drugs (e.g., connectivity maps24). In this case, drug signatures are biased in relation to the cell cultures, which have been used in the experiments, and could contain multiple response genes, which are not drug specific.25 In addition, multiple statistical issues exist as to how to determine precise estimates of statistical significance and false-positive rates.24, 25 Drug signatures implemented in DRUGSURV do not have these limitations, although for many drugs our current knowledge about targets is incomplete. Therefore, in these cases, the genes that are affected upon drug treatment are modelled only partially. Finally, the number of drugs covered by the connectivity map pilot project, for example, is only 164, whereas DRUGSURV covers both FDA approved drugs (∼1700) and experimental drugs (∼5000). We would like to emphasise that the coverage of drugs by DRUGSURV significantly exceeds any previous efforts in the field.
DRUGSURV provides multiple query options. The user can interrogate interested drug, specific cancer or explore any gene as a potential anticancer target. At present, DRUGSURV covers 44 independent clinical cancer expression data sets (in most cases each data set contains >100 patients annotated with survival information). DRUGSURV is regularly updated as new expression data sets become available26 to cover novel cancer types or specific clinical conditions as well as to update information on drug targets.
Finally, we must caution that this kind of statistical inference (the limitation also applies to all previous and most probably to all future similar studies) is based on simplified assumptions that all genes from both signatures (drug and cancer) are weighted equally (or could be weighted based on some data or assumptions). There might be cases when the modulation of one gene might be more important than modulation of many other genes.
Materials and Methods
Cancer expression data sets
Gene expression data sets were downloaded from the Gene Expression Omnibus repository.26 To be selected, the data set must be a clinical (patients) microarray expression data set with at least 70 samples and annotated with patient survival data. At present, DRUGSURV covers more than 40 data sets.
Cancer survival gene signature
For each available data set, we computed the set of genes whose up/downregulation is associated (P-value<0.01) with patient survival. Gene expression rank reflects relative mRNA expression level and is more consistent as it requires no normalization and thus introduces no normalization bias. For each gene in the data sets, samples were grouped with respect to expression rank of the gene.27, 28 The ‘Low expression’ and ‘High expression’ groups are those where the expression rank of the gene of interest is less or more than average expression rank across the data set, respectively. Standard statistical tests29 were used to find any statistical differences in survival outcome between the ‘Low expression’ and ‘High expression’ patient groups. Genes those split patients in groups with significant differences (P-value<0.01) in outcome were selected as a cancer gene signature specific for the clinical conditions studied in the data set.
Direct drug targets
The set of genes (derived based on the set of proteins) that are indicated in DrugBank7 as drug target, drug transporter or drug-metabolizing enzyme is defined as direct drug targets. In addition, we used Pubchem Bioassay repository.8 Reference to the Pubchem Bioassay repository means that the drug was tested in an HTS assay and was found to inhibit the activity of the tested protein.
Indirect drug targets
Indirect drug targets, along with direct drug targets, are proteins which interact with the direct drug targets based on the records of the IntAct database of protein–protein interactions.9
Linking statistically ‘drug targets’ with ‘cancer survival gene signature’
Let us denote l to be the number of targets (either direct or indirect) for drug B and kof them associated with survival (P-value<0.01) in the data set A. The rate k/l reflects the proportion of the drug B targets associated with survival. The rate k/lis compared with the rate m/N, where m is the total number of genes significantly associated with survival in the data set A and Nis a number of all genes measured in the data set A. A standard Hypogeometric test (with parameters k, l, m, N) is applied to derive the P-value of enrichment. The same procedure is repeated across all available data sets. Finally, derived P-values (Hypogeometric) are adjusted for multiple testing using false discovery rate control procedure30, 31 (the number of hypotheses tested is equal to the number data sets available).
Abbreviations
- EGFR:
-
epidermal growth factor receptor
- DRUGSURV:
-
computational tool to estimate the potential effects of a drug using patient survival information
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) and funding from Russian Federal grants 14.B37.21.1967 (to AA) and 11.G34.31.0069 (to GM).
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Amelio, I., Gostev, M., Knight, R. et al. DRUGSURV: a resource for repositioning of approved and experimental drugs in oncology based on patient survival information. Cell Death Dis 5, e1051 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/cddis.2014.9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/cddis.2014.9
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