posted on 2015-03-30, 11:13authored byI. Amelio, M. Gostev, R. A. Knight, A. E. Willis, G. Melino, A. V. Antonov
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.
Funding
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).
History
Citation
Cell Death and Disease , 2014, 5, pp. e1051-?
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Cell Death and Disease
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group for Associazione Differenziamento e Morte Cellulare