Pathway-extended gene expression signatures integrate novel biomarkers that improve predictions of patient responses to kinase inhibitors.

Journal: MedComm
Published Date:

Abstract

Cancer chemotherapy responses have been related to multiple pharmacogenetic biomarkers, often for the same drug. This study utilizes machine learning to derive multi-gene expression signatures that predict individual patient responses to specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors, including erlotinib, gefitinib, sorafenib, sunitinib, lapatinib and imatinib. Support vector machine (SVM) learning was used to train mathematical models that distinguished sensitivity from resistance to these drugs using a novel systems biology-based approach. This began with expression of genes previously implicated in specific drug responses, then expanded to evaluate genes whose products were related through biochemical pathways and interactions. Optimal pathway-extended SVMs predicted responses in patients at accuracies of 70% (imatinib), 71% (lapatinib), 83% (sunitinib), 83% (erlotinib), 88% (sorafenib) and 91% (gefitinib). These best performing pathway-extended models demonstrated improved balance predicting both sensitive and resistant patient categories, with many of these genes having a known role in cancer aetiology. Ensemble machine learning-based averaging of multiple pathway-extended models derived for an individual drug increased accuracy to >70% for erlotinib, gefitinib, lapatinib and sorafenib. Through incorporation of novel cancer biomarkers, machine learning-based pathway-extended signatures display strong efficacy predicting both sensitive and resistant patient responses to chemotherapy.

Authors

  • Ashis J Bagchee-Clark
    Department of Biochemistry, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 2C8 Canada.
  • Eliseos J Mucaki
    Department of Biochemistry, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 2C8 Canada.
  • Tyson Whitehead
    SHARCNET University of Western Ontario London Ontario N6A 5B7 Canada.
  • Peter K Rogan
    Department of Biochemistry, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 2C8 Canada.

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