We propose to better employ existing drugs to define new agents and combinations of agents to treat HNSCC, a disease with unchanged survival rates for four decades in need of new approaches, tools and perspectives. To do so we will combine the advantages of the large dataset in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) containing genomics, epigenomics and basic outcomes data but including little functional information to support causality in the disease or its treatment efficacy, with a well annotated clinical dataset that uniquely includes functional information on the sensitivity of HNSCC patient tumor cells to a panel of drugs approved or under development for human diseases but not yet applied to HNSCC. Using cutting-edge computational methods, we will mine the TCGA dataset in terms of aberrational gene pathway networks, prioritizing their relevance to HNSCC. We are taking advantage of a high throughput inhibitor assay and computational tools originally showing success in leukemia to design and employ HNSCC-specific inhibitor panels that capture the diversity of aberrational pathways in TCGA to test viable cells from patients' HNSCC tumors to predict effective targeted therapeutic agents and identify the reasons for differential response or resistance to certain drugs among patients. Our dual-PI expertise encompasses creating and using tools of cross-platform data analysis and precision medicine (McWeeney) and repository and specialized cell culture design, biochemical and molecular analysis and orthotopic xenograft models (Kulesz-Martin). Our preliminary results show convergence of pathways and targets from functional analysis of our OHSU dataset with those highly significant from TCGA data, in which 73 pathways are represented on the initial ~120 drug panel, and another 121 pathways, which we call dark, are not represented. The dark pathways offer a source of innovative targets for creation of a HNSCC-specific inhibitor panel. Our preliminary data show 15 drugs that reach thresholds of efficacy in 7 cases tested. Our preliminary analyses of TCGA with our HNSCC patient datasets annotated by RNASeq and functionally by inhibitor assay identified differential responses to EGFR inhibitors, PI3K inhibitors and other targeted agents. Cases where single agents were ineffective were sensitive to drug combinations with EGFR inhibitors. We propose to pursue more effective therapies for HNSCC as follows: 1) Perform complementary analysis of TCGA data with -omics and functional data on OHSU HNSCC patients' cells to develop HNSCC-specific inhibitor panels and more effectively apply available drugs to HNSCC treatment, and to illuminate dark pathways as a source of new targets; 2) Prioritize targets computationally, taking advantage of state-of-the-art bioinformatics tools for cross-platform analysis of TCGA and OHSU data, and validate these in vitro as responsible for patient tumor cell-specific drug (in)sensitivities; and 3) Test predictions in situ in original patent tumors and in vivo using orthotopic xenograft models, relating results to clinical outcomes to define subsets of HNSCC for future molecular predictive tests and tailoring treatment to patient tumor characteristics.

Public Health Relevance

There are many drugs approved or in development for human cancers, but only one FDA-approved drug targeted specifically for use in head and neck cancer (HNSCC, e.g. oral cavity, throat, larynx), the sixth most deadly cancer worldwide, affecting 260,000 patients in the US. We propose to analyze the National Cancer Institute's The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) data for abnormal gene pathways highly relevant to HNSCC, develop an HNSCC-specific panel of approximately one hundred available drugs that target those pathways and for the most part have never been tested in HNSCC, and expose live tumor cells from HNSCC patients to this panel so that we can: 1) find drugs that kill HNSCC tumor cells, 2) identify the gene targets responsible for why some patients respond to certain treatments and others do not, making use of mathematical and experimental tools we created in-house to compare gene networks and drug response, and 3) do the tests on actual patient tumors and in preclinical experimental models that are needed to move the top performing drugs or combinations of drugs to HNSCC clinical trials. Our goal is to provide two new 'precision medicine' strategies per year, as alternatives or as options after failure of radiation, chemotherapy, or deep tissue surgeries, to slow or stop the spread of the HNSCC, extend survival (which has remained at ~50% for the last 40 years) and improve quality of life by providing a treatment most likely to benefit each HNSCC patient.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA192405-01A1
Application #
8987478
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BMCT-C (01))
Program Officer
Forry, Suzanne L
Project Start
2015-08-01
Project End
2020-07-31
Budget Start
2015-08-01
Budget End
2016-07-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$505,849
Indirect Cost
$175,890
Name
Oregon Health and Science University
Department
Dermatology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
096997515
City
Portland
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97239
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