Abstract
The effectiveness of most cancer targeted therapies is short-lived. Tumors often develop resistance that might be overcome with drug combinations. However, the number of possible combinations is vast, necessitating data-driven approaches to find optimal patient-specific treatments. Here we report AstraZeneca’s large drug combination dataset, consisting of 11,576 experiments from 910 combinations across 85 molecularly characterized cancer cell lines, and results of a DREAM Challenge to evaluate computational strategies for predicting synergistic drug pairs and biomarkers. 160 teams participated to provide a comprehensive methodological development and benchmarking. Winning methods incorporate prior knowledge of drug-target interactions. Synergy is predicted with an accuracy matching biological replicates for >60% of combinations. However, 20% of drug combinations are poorly predicted by all methods. Genomic rationale for synergy predictions are identified, including ADAM17 inhibitor antagonism when combined with PIK3CB/D inhibition contrasting to synergy when combined with other PI3K-pathway inhibitors in PIK3CA mutant cells.
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Introduction
Personalized treatment matching targeted drugs to a tumor’s genetics has resulted in remarkable responses. Unfortunately, most patients’ tumors develop resistance leading to disease relapse. There are multiple mechanisms that may lead to drug resistance1 that include genetic and non-genetic heterogeneity inherent in advanced cancers, coupled with complex feedback and regulatory mechanisms, and dynamic interactions between tumor cells and their microenvironment. Any single therapy may be limited in its effectiveness, but drug combinations are hypothesized to potentially overcome drug resistance and lead to more durable responses in patients. The molecular makeup of cancer cells and the mechanisms driving resistance will influence the optimal combination of mechanisms to target1,2,3.
High-throughput preclinical approaches are crucial to determine and evaluate effective combination strategies. While empirical experiments are important for observing potential synergistic properties across drug pairs, the possible number of combinations grows exponentially with the number of drugs under consideration. This is further complicated by the influence of disease and cellular contexts, rendering it impractical to cover all possibilities with undirected experimental screens4. Computational approaches for predicting drug synergy are critical to guide experimental approaches for discovery of rational combination therapy5.
A number of approaches have been developed to model drug combination synergy using chemical, biological, and molecular data from cancer cell lines6,7 but with limited translatability to the clinic. A key bottleneck in the development of such models has been a lack of public data of sufficient size and variety to train computational approaches4,8, particularly considering the diversity of biological mechanisms that may influence drug response. A further limit to the translatability of many computational approaches is their reliance on data features that may not be present during the course of patient care, such as on-treatment tumor molecular profiles.
To accelerate the understanding of drug combination synergy, Dialog for Reverse Engineering Assessments and Methods (DREAM) Challenges partnered with AstraZeneca and the Sanger Institute to launch the AstraZeneca-Sanger Drug Combination Prediction DREAM Challenge. DREAM Challenges (dreamchallenges.org[www.dreamchallenges.org]) are collaborative competitions that pose important biomedical questions to the scientific community, and evaluate participants’ predictions in a statistically rigorous and unbiased way, emphasizing model reproducibility, and methodological transparency9.
This Challenge was designed to explore fundamental traits that underlie effective combination treatments and synergistic drug behavior. Specifically, it was structured to address the following translational questions using data available prior to drug treatment (mirroring a clinically relevant scenario to direct therapeutic choice): [i] how to predict whether a known (previously tested) drug combination will be effective for a specific patient; [ii] how to predict which new (untested) drug combinations are likely to yield synergistic behaviors in a patient population; and [iii] how to identify novel biomarkers that may help reveal underlying mechanisms related to drug synergy.
We shared with the scientific community 11,576 experimentally tested drug combinations on 85 cancer cell lines. Molecular data was provided for the untreated (baseline) cell lines, alongside chemical information for the respective drugs. Participants used the described data to train and test models, and were encouraged to extend computational techniques to leverage a priori knowledge of cellular signaling networks.
In this manuscript, we report on the results of this Challenge where we have identified novel and performant methods using a rigorous evaluation framework on previously unpublished data. We describe the details of these approaches, as well as general trends arising from the meta-analysis of all submissions. The full dataset, along with methods and scoring functions, are freely provided to the research community, and available to benchmark future algorithms in the field. Finally, we describe putative mechanistic models derived from the observed predictive features underlying synergistic responses, particularly between receptor tyrosine kinase and PI3K/AKT pathway inhibitors.
Results
A large high-throughput drug combination screen
We collated a combinatorial drug sensitivity screen comprising 11,576 experiments each measured in a 6-by-6 dose matrix (Methods) across 85 cancer cell lines. A synergy and an antagonism distribution (Loewe reference model10,11) were calculated and summarized via a single score for each experimental matrix (Methods; Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Data 1). The resulting dataset included highly reproducible cell viability response measurements and synergy scores for 910 pairwise combinations of 118 drugs (Supplementary Fig. 2 and Methods), plus information on the drugs including putative drug targets and their chemical properties. We also integrated deep molecular characterization of these same cell lines, including somatic mutations, copy-number alterations, DNA methylation, and gene expression profiles (Fig. 1a–c) measured before drug treatment12.
The 85 cell lines were predominantly derived from tumors of the breast (N = 34), lung (N = 22), bladder (N = 14), and the gastrointestinal tract (N = 12) (Fig. 1d). Drug synergy score distributions varied across disease types (Fig. 1d); in particular lung cell lines had over twofold higher mean synergy than breast cell lines (t-test P = 7e-27). Of the 118 drugs tested, 59 were targeted therapies against components of oncogenic signaling pathways (Methods), 15 of which target receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), 22 target PI3K/AKT signaling, and 9 target MAPK signaling (Fig. 1e, f). Across the pairwise drug combination experiments, 88% (N = 797) of the unique pairs had drug targets within the same signaling pathway and demonstrated markedly overall higher synergy scores (average of 17.3 vs. 7.3, t-test P = 2e–18) than the remaining 12% (N = 113) whose drug targets were defined to be in distinct pathways. As part of the Challenge design, we ensured that drug targeted pathways and cancer types were proportionally distributed across sub-challenges and training/test datasets (Fig. 1g). Sparsity in the cell line drug combination data matrix (Fig. 1g) resulted as several drug combinations were selectively profiled in clinically relevant cancer cell lines, e.g., ESR1 inhibitors were predominantly combined with other drugs in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer cell lines since these agents are standard of care within this cancer subtype.
Comparison of AZ-DREAM to published combination screens
We compared the AstraZeneca-DREAM (AZ-DREAM) challenge dataset with the independently published in vitro combination screening studies by O’Neil et al.4 and ALMANAC13. All three studies used different experimental designs and protocols (Fig. 2a and Supplementary Table 1), with AZ-DREAM exploring screens with a 5-by-5 concentration titration format, O’Neill et al.4 a 4-by-4 format, and ALMANAC a 3-by-3 format. The overlap is limited in cell lines, targets and drugs explored: 10 cells and 7 targets, 4 drugs and 0 combination-cell pairs shared between AZ-DREAM and O’Neil et al.4; and 15 cells, 28 targets, 19 drugs, and 10 combination-cell pairs shared between AZ-DREAM and ALMANAC. AZ-DREAM provides greater coverage of targeted agents and greater numbers of cell lines per tumor type (Supplementary Table 1).
For the AZ-DREAM and ALMANAC comparison, only nine experiments passing quality control (Supplementary Methods) had the same combination tested in the same cell line, comprising gefitinib combined with either tamoxifen, fulvestrant, vorinostat, crizotinib, or everolimus, and tested in two breast cancer cell lines (MCF7 or T47D). Encouragingly, all but one experiment were concordantly identified synergistic with the same effect signs seen in AZ-DREAM and ALMANAC (Fig. 2b). Within the nine overlapping experiments, 38 titrations were identically used by both ALMANAC and AZ-DREAM (Supplementary Fig. 3 and Supplementary Fig. 4a). For these 38 titrations we observed a correlation >0.7 (Fig. 2c and P < 10−7, test for association) between cell viability measures from AZ-DREAM and ALMANAC, maintained for individual combinations and cell lines where the number of data points was sufficient (Supplementary Fig. 4).
While there were ten cell lines and four drugs found in both AZ-DREAM and O’Neil et al.4, no combination-cell experiment was shared between those two screens. O’Neill et al.4 data displayed lower dispersion of synergy scores (Supplementary Fig. 2c, d) and fewer instances of extreme synergy scores. The technical reproducibility within these screens, however, was comparable, with a similar correlation observed between replicated experiments (Spearman = 0.63 for O'Neil et al.,4 Spearman = 0.56 for AZ-DREAM).
We derived a RECIST-like response measure from the AZ-DREAM in vitro data (see Methods) to enable comparison to in vivo response metrics for the eight overlapping combinations in patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX) models published by Gao et al.8 (Supplementary Data 1 and Supplementary Fig. 5a). We compared the % PDX models with synergy in Gao et al.4,8 to the % cell lines with synergy in AZ-DREAM. A concordant trend was observed (Pearson r = 0.34, P = 0.42; Methods; Supplementary Fig. 5b), although too few combinations were shared between the datasets to conclude with statistical confidence.
Benchmarking of methods reveal high prediction accuracy
The Challenge was divided into two primary sub-challenges. In sub-challenge 1 (SC1) participants were asked to predict continuous synergy scores for drug combinations for which training data on those same combinations were available. In sub-challenge 2 (SC2), participants were asked to predict binary synergy status on drug combinations for which no training data was provided, thereby requiring participants to infer synergy using transferable data/knowledge patterns identified from previously seen independent drug pairs. SC1 was further subdivided into two parts: SC1A allowed the use of all available data for model prediction, while SC1B limited data use to just mutation and copy-number variation (mimicking current clinical assay feasibility).
A total of 969 participants of diverse geography and expertize registered for the Challenge (Supplementary Fig. 6a, b). One-hundred sixty teams submitted across any portion of the Challenge and 78 teams submitted for final assessment. Specifically, SC1A received final submissions from 76 teams, 62 for SC1B and 39 for SC2.
As scoring metric we used the average weighted Pearson correlation between the continuous endpoints of predicted and known synergy values for SC1, and both the –log10(p) from a 3-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and balanced accuracy (BAC) for SC2 where predictions were binary (Methods). Across all teams, mean performance scores were r = 0.24 ± 0.01 and r = 0.23 ± 0.01 (weighted Pearson correlation ± standard error) for SC1A and SC1B, respectively, and –log10(p) = 12.6 (3-way ANOVA) for SC2. Despite omitting several input data types, teams performed only slightly worse for SC1B, Δprimary metric = 0.01 (t-test P = 0.90), compared to SC1A (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 6c, d). While teams employed many different methodological approaches to modeling drug synergy—including regression, decision trees, random forests, Gaussian processes, SVM, neural networks, text mining, mechanistic network-based, and others (Supplementary Fig. 7a)—algorithm class showed little relationship to performance (Supplementary Fig. 7b). The top winning team in all three sub-challenge was Yuanfang Guan (Y Guan) with primary metrics of 0.48, 0.45, and 74.89 in SC1A, SC1B, and SC2, respectively. Based on the primary metric in SC2, Y Guan performed considerably better (Methods; >5 Bayes Factor, based on bootstrapped metrics’ comparisons) than other teams (Fig. 3b). All performance statistics and team rankings are available at the Challenge website (synapse.org/DrugCombinationChallenge[https://www.synapse.org/#!Synapse:syn4231880/wiki/235649]).
To benchmark the performance of teams in the final rounds of SC1A/B and SC2, we established lower and upper bounds of performance. We defined the lower bound as the null model, i.e., random permutation of the synergy data across each cell line (see ‘Code availability’’ section). We would not expect algorithms to predict better than the reproducibility observed between replicate experiments. We therefore identified cases for which replicate measurements (same drug/combination tested independently in the same cell line) were available and assessed the primary metric achieved when using one measure to predict the other. We set this metric value as our upper-bound. We observed that 83%, 85%, and 94% of submitted models performed better than random (Methods; 5% false discovery rate, FDR) for SC1A, SC1B, and SC2, respectively. Team performances varied widely, but remarkably the top 15 models (20%) submitted to SC1A all reached a performance level comparable to experimental replicates (primary metric = 0.43; Fig. 3a), as did the top 13 models (21%) in SC1B. Proportionally fewer teams performed at the level of replicate experiments in SC2 based on the BAC, with North Atlantic Dream (NAD) achieving the best performance (BAC = 0.688; Fig. 3c).
Given the less robust performance of SC2, we assessed whether an ensemble method—based on an aggregation of all submitted models—could yield a better overall model, a phenomenon called “wisdom of the crowd”9,14. By applying a Spectral Meta-Learner (SML)15 as our ensembl approach, we achieved a modest improvement in performance (BAC = 0.693) over the best performing individual team (BAC = 0.688), as well as an ensemble of randomly selected models (BAC = 0.63, (Fig. 3d).
Leveraging biological relationships improves predictions
A common strategy among top-performing teams (DMIS, NAD, and Y Guan) was to filter molecular features, leaving only those related to known cancer drivers for subsequent modeling (Supplementary Methods). These teams also consolidated pharmacological and/or functional pathway information associated with the molecular drug target, enabling one drug’s model to learn from data generated for another drug with the same target (Y Guan16 and NAD16,17,18).
We took two approaches to analyze each feature type’s importance, particularly whether incorporating molecular features and chemical/biological knowledge can increase prediction accuracy. In the first approach, we generated a baseline model (following Team NAD’s method) utilizing only cell line and drug labels as input features as per SC1B. We then assessed changes in the primary metric after the substitution or addition of feature types (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Methods). In the second approach, we started with the DMIS model obtained from SC1B, and then iteratively removed single feature types and pairs of features to assess changes in prediction accuracy (Fig. 4b and Supplementary Methods).
Surprisingly, high primary metrics were observed for the NAD baseline model where the only input features were drug and cell line label (Fig. 4a, 0.32). Drug target was the only feature to improve performance of the NAD baseline model when swapped with drug label (Fig. 4a, t-test P = 0.012). Furthermore, removing both drug label and target resulted in the highest performance drop for the DMIS model (Fig. 4b, −0.17). This result highlights the importance of the global cell-line state in predicting drug synergy, and how drug target information shared across drugs can facilitate transfer learning across separate models. Mutational and copy-number variation (CNV) data can similarly offer a barcode of cell identity to encode cell line label. However, where mutation data improved performance when replacing cell line labels, replacement with CNV decreased performance significantly (Fig. 4a, t-test P = 8.8e-6). Importantly, in all cases additional feature data increased performance when added to the NAD baseline model (Fig. 4a, t-test P = 0.009, 0.009, 0.002, 0.008, 0.021 adding drug target, KEGG pathway, Gene Ontology, signaling network, and mutation features, respectively). Ensemble of different feature sets improved prediction most when collectively increasing coverage of biological (pathway) complexity (Fig. 4a, t-test P = 1.2e-6).
Inspecting consistently poorly predicted drug combinations
While a global performance metric applied to all cell-lines and drug combinations provides a broad assessment of model prediction accuracy, we hypothesized that some models may be optimized for certain subclasses of combinations and/or tumor types. We assessed the Pearson correlation between predicted and observed synergy scores for each combination in SC1A/B, and clustered teams by correlation of performance across combinations. Of the 118 combinations that had observed synergy scores >20 in more than one cell line, we identified 22 combinations predicted poorly by all participants (Fig. 5a, Methods), and over 50 combinations predicted well across all teams.
Combinations tested across a higher diversity of tumor types tended to show lower overall performance (Supplementary Fig. 8a; t-test P = 0.04), indicating that a pan-cancer prediction presents a more difficult prediction task. Combinations tested across more tumor types were also tested across greater numbers of experiments (Supplementary Fig. 8b; Spearman = 0.56, P = 2.3e–15), but no significant difference was observed between performance and number of experiments within a cancer type specific setting (Supplementary Fig. 8c, d). On average the quality assessment scores were significantly better (t-test P = 0.018) for the pharmacology experiments in the training set of well predicted compared to poorly predicted combinations (Supplementary Fig. 8e). Comparable trends were seen between the quality of synergy and predictive performance in the training and test sets (Supplementary Fig. 8f; r = 0.52 vs. 0.43). The distribution of synergy scores were similar between poorly and well predicted combinations (Supplementary Fig. 8g) as were the proportion of synergistic cases (37% for poorly predicted vs. 39% for well predicted).
Well predicted cases were enriched for combinations inhibiting both the PI3K/AKT and MAPK pathways (Fig. 5b, average Pearson r = 0.37 vs. 0.25; t-test P = 0.008), or apoptosis pathway combined with either metabolism, cell cycle, or receptor tyrosine kinase pathways. The drugs targeting these pathways were prevalent in our dataset, but these specific combinations of those drugs were not (Supplementary Fig. 9a). Assessment of the interactions between drug targets and neighboring proteins from OmniPath, a comprehensive compendium of literature-based pathway resources19, revealed no differences in the somatic alteration frequency for targets or their first neighbors between the poorly and well predicted combinations (Supplementary Fig. 9b, c). We did observe a significant enrichment of well predicted combinations where both drugs’ respective targets were downstream of a common neighboring protein (Fig. 5c, t-test P = 0.01), and conversely, we observed an enrichment of poorly predicted combinations where targets were both up-stream (Fig. 5c, t-test P = 0.03). There was no significant difference (Chi-sqr P = 0.44) in OmniPath protein network distance between drug targets for well and poorly predicted combinations (Fig. 5d), nor any correlation between either network distance and average/median synergy scores (Fig. 5e) or the number of cases with synergy >20. Combinations where targets were found to not be connected in a protein network had significantly lower average synergy (t-test P = 0.031) and lower max synergy (t-test P = 0.0021).
Biomarkers of drug combination synergies
A limitation of many machine learning algorithms is the lack of feature interpretability and experimentally testable logic-based rules. We took two approaches to identify biomarkers that may be predictive of drug synergies: a direct survey of participants through which predictive features were nominated for each drug pair (Supplementary Data 2); and retrospective work focusing on results from two of the best performing teams, NAD and DMIS, to deconvolute features most impactful to model predictions (Supplementary Fig. 10 and Supplementary Data 3).
The survey-submitted biomarker results varied in detail and depth (Supplementary Data 2), but common genetic markers were apparent across good predictions in SC1B, including EGFR, ERBB2, PIK3CA, PTEN, TP53, or RB1. In the survey, synergy was commonly assigned to drug pairs targeting directly down- or up-stream of a mutated, amplified, overexpressed or deleted cancer gene. We hypothesized that drug synergy may result when one drug overcomes a resistance mechanism for the other. Focusing on mutations in cancer genes (as defined by Iorio et al.12) we identified all mutations associated with resistance to monotherapy in our data (Supplementary Methods and Methods) selected at increasingly stringent P-value (wilcoxon rank sum test) thresholds (Supplementary Methods and Methods). For each threshold, we then assessed the likelihood of synergy seen from combinations paired to these monotherapies in the presence vs. absence of the respective mutation. We observed an increase in the proportion of synergistic drug combinations with each increase in threshold stringency (Fig. 6a, Pearson r = −0.90, P = 4.09e-38). We observed the same trend in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models (Fig. 6b, Pearson r = −0.95, P = 2.2e-49). This observation supports the notion that drug sensitivity may be restored with drug combinations targeting a resistance driver.
We also explored models of best performing teams and their chosen features, focusing on biomarker associations aligned to combinations for which the respective team had achieved a robust prediction accuracy (Pearson r > 0.5), with particular interest in the genetic biomarkers revealed through SC1B. Multiple criteria for quality, independence and reproducibility (Methods)4,8 were applied yielding 13 feature-to-combination associations (Fig. 7a and Supplementary Data 3), seven associated with synergy and six with non-synergy. To assess whether these associations could be independently validated as synergistic biomarkers, we explored nine overlapping and 21 non-overlapping (independent) cell lines in O’Neil et al.4 (Fig. 7b) that were treated with similar drug combinations, i.e., same putative drug targets. Concordance of association was observed in the nine overlapping cell lines (Fig. 7c; six out of seven associations, ~86%) and in the 21 independent cell lines (Fig. 7d; eight out of eleven associations, ~72%).
Among the prioritized feature-to-combination associations were several genetic variants associated with synergistic responses to the combination of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitors with inhibitors of the downstream PI3K/AKT pathway. Amplifications or activating mutations in EGFR or ERBB2 consistently predicted synergy from inhibition of the RTK + PI3K/AKT pathways across multiple independent drugs and datasets (Fig. 7a). Less direct relationships were also observed, including combined AKT inhibition with either IGFR inhibition in the ERBB2 mutant setting or FGFR inhibition in the EGFR mutant setting (Supplementary Data 3). Despite kinase domain homology it is unlikely these observations are explained by off-target effects since EGFR, ERBB2, and FGFR mutations were only predictive of respective monotherapy responses (Supplementary Fig. 11). Combinations inhibiting multiple points within the PI3K/AKT pathway also showed synergy in the presence of up-stream activation from mutations in PIK3CA or deleterious events in PTEN (Fig. 7a, e). Inhibition of the metalloproteinase ADAM17, known to influence RTK activity20, also showed synergistic responses in a common subset of cell lines when combined with inhibitors of PIK3C-pan or AKT1/2 (Fig. 7a and Supplementary Data 3), with a notable exception of PIK3CB/D selective inhibitors, which show antagonism unique to PIK3CA mutant cell lines (Fig. 7e, f). Amplification and activating mutations in Androgen Receptor (AR) were also found to be associated with antagonistic effects when targeting AKT in combination with MAP2K or IGFR inhibitors (Fig. 7a).
Translatability of synergy and biomarker predictions
We assessed the performance of top-performing AstraZeneca-DREAM models on the independent screening datasets by O’Neil et al.4 and ALMANAC13. Since no combination-cell experiments directly overlapped AZ-DREAM and O’Neil et al.4, we collapsed drugs by shared targets to expand the overlap. We observed that SC1A models from NAD and DMIS outperformed random models (Fig. 8a, mean primary metric = 0.07, top 1% of random models) for cell lines and drug target combinations non-overlapping between O’Neill et al. and AZ-DREAM data (Supplementary Data 1). Interestingly, no substantial performance increase was observed when independent model predictions were made for the ten cell lines in common between the two datasets, nor the 30 combinations with similar chemical/target properties (Supplementary Table 2 and Fig. 8b–d). As in the main Challenge, combining these two or more models in an ensemble led to an improved prediction performance (Fig. 8a–d).
Considering the limited overlap and correlation of synergies between AZ-DREAM and ALMANAC datasets, high performance was not expected when predicting ALMANAC synergy scores with models trained on AZ-DREAM data points alone, as was observed for the NAD model. We trained two NAD models on 50% of the ALMANAC data: first a baseline model to show maximum performance achievable when using only cell and drug label features as input; and a second allowing use of the full feature set as input. The full model consistently predicted significantly better than baseline in the remaining 50% over ten randomized iterations, giving confidence in the transferability of the method designed for AZ-DREAM. Best performance was observed for targeted combinations (r = 0.369 vs. 0.287 for full NAD and baseline NAD model, ANOVA P = 1.322e-31 for model type and P = 5.5e-05 for model type and targeted therapy association, Fig. 8e).
Exploring AZ-DREAM biomarker associations prioritized as described in earlier sections, we assessed statistical association for drug combinations with consistent targets in the O’Neil et al.4 dataset. In the ten cell lines overlapping the AZ-DREAM and O’Neil et al.4 datasets, seven of the prioritized biomarker-drug combinations were present, of which six (86%) showed reproducible directionality (FDR < 35%, Fig. 7c). In the 21 O’Neil et al.4 cell lines not used within AZ-DREAM training, 11 of the prioritized biomarker-drug combinations were present, of which 8 (72%) showed reproducible directionality (Fig. 7d).
Discussion
The objective of this AstraZeneca-DREAM Challenge was to drive the development of innovative computational approaches to predict novel drug combinations and to comprehensively benchmark these approaches. To enable this we made one of the largest in vitro drug combinatorial screens to date available to the scientific community. We cover largely non-overlapping experiments to existing datasets and, in particular, offer extensive data for targeted therapies complimenting the non-targeted chemotherapeutic agents covered in the NCI-ALMANAC. Despite little overlap we demonstrated an encouraging reproducibility of data and predictions between screens, particularly when considering the confounding differences in experimental designs and assay formats21. Furthermore, we showed that some trends represented in these data can be reproduced in vivo, and that clinically efficacious combination pairs can be identified. Our double-blinded benchmark of 78 methods provides an unbiased comprehensive evaluation of the state-of-art of drug synergy prediction. Collectively this Challenge manuscript equips the scientific community with data and a methodological baseline for algorithm development, alongside a suite of computational methods to direct new experiments towards likely synergistic drug combinations.
The results of the AstraZeneca-Sanger Drug Combination Prediction DREAM Challenge have shed important light on the best practices and limitations in predicting drug synergy. By evaluating predictions from a large number of teams, we were able to discern important strategies for predicting drug synergy from molecular and chemical traits. As with most DREAM Challenges, we observed that the machine learning method itself has little impact on overall performance. Aggressive pre-filtering that incorporates clean sparse network data to consider feature relevance to drug targets and cancer was successfully used by top performers to limit model complexity and improve model generalizability. Despite the complexity of the problem, many teams reached the upper-bound of performance levels based on variability in experimental replicates. This was further confirmed when top-performing models were applied to an independent dataset, demonstrating robustness to assay variability, and context heterogeneity.
A comprehensive assessment of the predictive value of monotherapy was not completed in the Challenge format, in part due to initial miss-annotation of data. However, post-hoc analyses suggested it offered no significant improvement to well-performing models (Supplementary Fig. 12). Despite minimal predictivity from monotherapy itself as a feature, biomarkers associated with monotherapy resistance were observed to have predictive value for respective combinations. Looking forward, additional attention is also required for the one-fifth of combinations poorly predicted by all Challenge teams. The rationale differentiating these combinations is non-obvious but our data suggests, in part, some relationship to the complexity of network connectivity between drug targets and proximal biomarkers (Fig. 5c), perhaps a bias introduced by network-led dimension reduction techniques employed by well-performing models. Furthermore higher synergy scores were observed—in some combinations—when both drugs target downstream of a commonly interacting protein22. Collectively, these observations advocate for a more biologically rationalized approach to biomarker discovery, accounting for directionality and exclusivity of signaling and functional relationships between biomarkers and targets.
A notable absence from the Challenge was the use of mathematical, reaction- or logic-based mechanistic pathway modeling approaches23,24,25,26,27, likely due to the higher time and data input needed for model creation. The dynamic nature of mechanistic models may offer an advantage by enabling consideration of the heterogeneity that exists across even apparently ‘clonal’’ cell line populations28. The increasing availability of published pre-derived mechanistic models for many cancer relevant pathways may soon make such an approach more viable. Given the strong benefit seen from inclusion of prior-knowledge, and as text-based artificial intelligence technology matures, computational approaches, such as natural language processing (NLP) to harness knowledge from world literature may also become of significant benefit. Alternatively, more generic signatures of dynamic (e.g., transcriptional) output may first be used to identify a mechanistic rationale28,29,30,31 to which causative genetic or epigenetic events can then be inferred and aligned as predictive features32,33. A surprising result of our Challenge, however, suggested only modest improvement to prediction from inclusion of all data in SC1A compared to only genetics in SC1B.
To maximize potential for translation it is essential that modeling approaches reveal testable biological insight, particularly considering that this and prior Challenges show no predictive advantage to black box algorithms. As we discovered, however, it can be difficult to incentivize knowledge retrieval within a competition format that focuses on objective scoring of performance. Despite these limitations, we were able to extract important insights to biomarkers for certain drug combinations. Given the dominance of RTK and PI3K/AKT pathway targeting agents in the Challenge data, it was not surprising that these revealed some of our strongest combination-feature relationships. In multiple cases this aligned to a two-hit hypothesis targeting the activating driver with a downstream pathway component. These included synergies between EGFR and AKT inhibitors in the presence of activating EGFR mutations34, or AKT1/2 with pan-PI3K inhibitors in the presence of pathway activating mutations in PIK3CA or PTEN. In some cases the biomarker rationale for AKT inhibitor synergy with RTK or MAPK inhibition was less direct but indicative of crosstalk and feedback signaling previously reported35. Interestingly antagonism was observed in cell lines harboring activating mutations of AR36,37,38,39. Feedback signaling resulting from AKT inhibition has been seen to drive AR activity, which in turn can lead to the activation of the MAPK cascade39,40, attenuating respectively targeting drug activity.
The synergy observed between ADAM17 and PI3K/AKT pathway inhibitors may work through independent inhibition of multiple cancer hallmarks, or via a more direct mechanism whereby inhibition of ADAM17 driven proteolysis and shedding of RTKs20 stabilizes and increases signaling through PI3K/AKT41,42. Notably ADAM17 predominantly influences RTK’s other than EGFR/ERBB220, and no benefit is seen in cells with mutations in these genes. ADAM17 inhibition, however, showed antagonism unique to combined PIK3CB/D selective inhibitors within the PIK3CA mutant setting. Reduced synergy may result from a lessened dependency on PI3K paralogues in the presence of constitutively activated PIK3CA, or reduced benefit from ADAM17 loss in the extreme luminal/epithelial physiology of PIK3CA mutants. The apparent antagonism, however, suggests feedback following PIK3CB/D inhibition enhances mutant PIK3CA expression/activity. Indeed PIK3CB inhibition has been shown to result in elevated expression and activity of PIK3CA43, and may also relieve the inhibitory effects of substrate competition or dimerization between PIK3CA and PIK3CB/D.
Many drug combinations effective in the clinic to date involve mechanistically distinct agents, often chemotherapies combined with an additional targeted therapy, for which benefit may arise from the independent effects of the drugs on different subpopulations44 rather than synergy. More recently, an increasing number of combinations include multiple targeted therapies5. Hence, identifying both molecularly synergistic and complementary drugs, and how these affect inter- and intra-patient heterogeneity remains an essential area of future research. Future Challenges should further address the question of how to optimize translation of preclinical results into the clinic45. Where this Challenge addressed prediction of synergy for combinations of known drugs, an ability to predict truly novel beneficial target combinations should also be explored. Furthermore, the space of therapeutic combinations should be extended to include >2 drugs, and covering targets in independent cell types, such as subclonal tumor cell populations or cells of the tumor microenvironment and immune system3. These approaches can be complemented by adaptive and sequential strategies reactive to monitoring of the patient tumor and physiology. Success in these areas will be dependent on the availability and access to large-scale data needed for model development and validation. Public-private partnerships—as exemplified by this Challenge and AstraZeneca’s generous sharing of data with the research community—will be critical to future efforts.
Methods
Drug combination screening
All cell lines were authenticated at AstraZeneca cell banking using DNA fingerprinting short-tandem repeat assays and each bank is confirmed to be free from mycoplasma. Cells ordered from the global cell bank are cultured for up to 20 passages. Cell suspensions are counted using a haemocytometer and cells are re-suspended in full growth medium containing Pen/Strep to a final density for different cell line densities and for different seeding densities into 384-well cell culture plate. A volume of cells as determined by cell count and dependent on cell type was added to each well of a Greiner 384-well plate using a Multidrop Combi liquid handler and then incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 overnight in a rotating incubator. After seeding, plates were shaken to distribute the cells more evenly at the bottom of the wells and left to stand on the bench for 1 h to allow even settling of cells.
Drug combinations were screened with four combinations per 384-well plate in a 6-by-6 range of concentration format. The first row and first column in the 6-by-6 matrix are monotherapies of each drug in the combination, while the top left corner is the untreated control. Drug combinations therefore were tested in a 5-by-5 layout with comprehensively rescreening the monotherapy and control for each experiment to minimize batch effects. Drug concentrations ran from the highest dose to the lowest dose. All plates were dosed with drugs solubilized in DMSO or PBS, or DMSO alone to provide comparable treatment and max control wells. After 5 days of incubation 5 µl of 2 µM Sytox Green working solution was added to each well of the 384-well plates (0.133 µM final concentration) and the plates incubated for 1 h at room temperature. After incubation plates were read by the Acumen laser scanner to detect the number of Sytox Green stained cells. The total fluorescent intensity across the well was then read and the number of dead cells calculated by dividing this total fluorescence by the fluorescence of a single cell. The plates were re-read on the Acumen to give a total cell count. A live cell count was then determined by subtracting the dead cell count from the total cell count.
Quantifying combination synergy and antagonism
Synergy and antagonism were quantified in an automated way using freely available Combenefit software (v1.31)11. The approach implemented in Combenefit is based on quantifying synergy distribution by comparing a drugs combination experimental dose-response surface to a modeled reference based on individual drugs dose-response curves. Briefly, for each 6-by-6 matrix, monotherapy dose-responses were extracted and modeled as a sigmoidal curve via the Hill equation46. A reference dose-response surface is then generated by Combenefit based on the Loewe model of additive combinations and the single drug dose-response curves. The experimental combination dose–response surface is then compared by the software to the model-generated one, resulting in a synergy distribution in concentration space. This synergy distribution is finally further summarized by integrating the synergy distribution in logarithmic concentration space. The procedure resulted in a single score (the result of this integration) for each combination.
In vivo response class definitions
Response data for 62 treatments across ~1000 PDX models were derived from Gao et al.8 Putative drug targets from the AZ-DREAM and Gao et al.4,8 dataset were utilized to identify overlap. As synergy scores were not available for the Gao et al.4,8 dataset, ‘Best Response’’ (complete response-CR, partial response-PR, stable disease-SD, progressive disease-PD) for each combination-PDX pair were extracted and compared with monotherapy ‘Best Response’’ of each drug in the combination on the same PDX model. This was represented numerically where CR = 4, PR = 3, SD = 2, and PD = 1. Synergy was assigned to a change of +2 or more, and Antagonism to a change of −2 or less. A change of +1, 0, or −1 was assigned Additive, considering an element of experimental variability. Cases where best response has been observed as a range over time (PR→→PD), the earliest response was considered as we hypothesize this to reflect in vitro response in a more realistic sense for comparison.
The percent tumor volume change class definitions are as following:
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Synergistic efficacy: Combination treatment leads to better tumor regression than either monotherapy.
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Synergistic non-efficacy: Combination response is better than either monotherapy but does not result in tumor regression.
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Additivity: Combination response same as the better of either monotherapy responses.
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Non-synergistic efficacy: Combination response weaker than the better of the monotherapy responses but results in tumor regression.
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Antagonism: Combination response weaker than both monotherapies.
In vitro response class definitions
Response scores defined by the Loewe synergy model were considered in ordered to define in vitro response classes. Synergism was defined as Loewe scores ≥20, Antagonism ≤ −20, and rest are classed as Additive.
Molecular characterization
The 85 cell lines were molecularly characterized, including:
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Mutations from whole exome sequencing with Illumina HiSeq 2000 Agilent SureSelect (EGAS00001000978)
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Copy-number variants from Affymetrix SNP6.0 microarrays (EGAS00001000978)
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Gene expression from Affymetrix Human Genome U219 array plates (E-MTAB-3610)
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DNA methylation from Infinium HumanMethylation450 v1.2 BeadChip (GSE68379)
Mutations were called with CAVEMAN [https://github.com/cancerit/CaVEMan/]47 and PINDEL [http://gmt.genome.wustl.edu/packages/pindel/]48 as reported in ref. 12. Variants were provided without further filtering, including putative passenger mutations, germline variants, and potential cell line artefacts, which are in total 75,281 mutations in 85 cell lines.
Copy-number variants (CNVs) are called with the PICNIC [http://www.sanger.ac.uk/resources/software/picnic/]49 algorithm using the human genome build 38 as the reference. CNVs might be wild type, deletion, or amplification of certain segments in a chromosome. One or multiple genes can fall within such segments. We reported copy number for the major and minor allele on gene and segment level.
Gene expression was processed as described in ref. 12, including Robust Multi-array Average (RMA) normalization with the R-package ‘affy’’50. Gene expression for 83 cell lines across 17,419 genes (HGNC labels) was reported; no expression was available for MDA-MB-175-VII and NCI-H1437.
DNA methylation was reported for 82 cell lines the beta and M values51 for 287,450 probes; no methylation was available for the cell lines SW620, KMS-11, and MDA-MB-175-VII. In an additional processing step, CpG sites were compressed to CpG island with the definition from UCSC genome browser52, resulting in a total of 26,313 CpG island based on either M or beta values.
Drug properties
The identity of all drugs was anonymized, but for all agents the putative targets are revealed. The gene names of the protein targets are listed with ‘*’’ denoting any character if the target is a protein family. Furthermore, for 58 drugs the Molecular weight, H-bond acceptors, H-bond donors, calculated octanol-water partition coefficient, Lipinski’s rule of 5, and their SMILES (Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry Specification) are provided. Drugs were grouped into pathways and biological processes manually according to their protein targets (Supplementary Data 1).
Challenge organization
The Challenge consisted of two sub-challenges, each with multiple rounds: a leaderboard, validation, bonus, and collaborative round. SC1 had four leaderboard rounds that lasted 8, 6, 5, and 5 weeks, while SC2 had three leaderboard rounds that lasted 12, 7, and 5 weeks. Participants were given a leaderboard dataset to build a model and generate three prediction files per leaderboard round. Scores were returned to participants so that they can improve their model throughout these rounds for their one submission to the final round, which was scored against a held-out dataset. The final round lasted for 2 weeks, which was then followed by a 9 week bonus round and 10 week collaborative round.
Challenge pharmacology data splits
In SC1, participants were asked to predict drug synergy of 167 combinations in the panel of 85 cell lines. The synergy data of each drug combination was partitioned into three sets: a training dataset (3/6–50%), a leaderboard set (1/6–16.7%), and validation set (2/6–33%) of treated cell lines. SC2 leveraged data for remaining 740 drug combinations not overlapping with those used in SC1, although data for some of the same drugs (in combination with different drugs), homologous drugs (i.e., same target, but different chemical structure), and cell lines were included. A leaderboard set (370 combinations) and a final validation set (370 combinations) were randomly split, which are mutually exclusive from each other, as well as from SC1.
Primary scoring metric of Sub-Challenge 1
With synergy scores roughly normally distributed and and outliers truncated to −100 and 100 (Supplementary Fig. 2), Pearson’s correlation was employed as the base measure of prediction accuracy within each drug combination. The primary metric was then the average weighted Pearson correlation (ρw) of the predicted vs. observed synergy scores across each individual drug combination, i. The weight for a given drug combination i was \(\sqrt {n_i - 1}\)where ni is the number of cell lines treated with the drug combination. This resulted in the following primary metric for SC1A&B,
where N` = 167 were the tested drug combinations.
Tie-breaking scoring metric of Sub-Challenge 1
The tie-breaking metric was identical to the primary metric Eq. 1 except that it was applied to the subset of drug combinations that have at least one cell line with synergy score \(S_{ci} \ge 20\)in the held-out test set (Sci = synergy score at cell line c and drug combination i). Neither the subset of drug combinations nor its size (N = 118) was revealed to participants prior to final evaluation.
Primary scoring metric of Sub-Challenge 2
The primary metric was a sequential three-way ANOVA, which tested the separation of held-out synergy scores by predicted synergy (=1) and predicted non-synergy (=0). In the sequential three-way ANOVA (type 1), we controlled for systematic drug and cell line effects, and evaluated variance explained by a given team’s synergy predictions. We define the primary metric as
where sgn is the sign of the effect size (positive or negative separation by prediction), and p is the P-value (F-statistic) computed from the ANOVA distinguishing predicted synergy (=1) from predicted non-synergy (=0) across all experimentally measured synergy scores.
This three-way ANOVA score can be interpreted via linear regression where the intercept is set to 0.
Here, the response variable y is the observed synergy, which is normally distributed, and there are three predictive features: dc = drug combination, cl = cell line and a teams binary synergy predictions x. Then the primary metric, \({\mathrm{SA}} = - {\mathrm{log}}_{10}(p.{\mathrm{value}}[\beta _3])x{\mathrm{sign}}(\beta _3)\), measures the significance of a team’s predictions after controlling for variance associated with cell line and and drug combinations.
Tie-breaking scoring metric of Sub-Challenge 2
As the tie-breaking metric, we used balanced accuracy (BAC) using discretized synergy scores \(S_{ci} \ge 20\)to evaluate the binary classifiers submitted in this sub-challenge. This metric evaluates both the sensitivity and specificity of the classifiers while taking into account the low proportion of synergistic cases to un-synergistic.
Application of the Tie-Breaking Metric
In each sub-challenge, we estimated a Bayes Factor (BF) using a paired bootstrapped approach to determine whether a team’s score was statistically indistinguishable from another. In the event that a team’s scores were determined to be statistically equivalent, we then applied the tie-breaking metric. To estimate the BF, we sample with replacement from the M observations of the given sub-challenge and computing the primary metric (pm) for each team 1000 times. For a given team, T, KT was computed by
Where \(pm_{best,i}\)is the bootstrapped primary metric at iteration i for the team with the highest primary metric (non-bootstrapped).
Assessing performance of individual combinations
Combinations defined as poorly predicted had an average predicted vs. observed Pearson correlation across teams in the range seen with a random predictor (SC1 Primary metric = −0.25 and 0.25). In contrast, well predicted combinations had an average Pearson correlation across teams of above 0.5.
Independent validation on O’Neil et al. Merck screen
In order to assess the utility of features and the predictability of the learning algorithms in new contexts, we provided the participants an independent large-scale oncology combination screen published recently4. The O'Neil et al.4 dataset consists of 22,737 experimental endpoints covering 583 doublet combinations across 39 diverse cancer cell lines. Thirty-eight experimental drugs and approved drugs were included in this combination screen using a 4-by-4 dosing regimen. Raw cell viability measures for each combination experiment were processed through Combenefit11 to generate synergy scores as per the Challenge dataset. While there are 6 approved drugs, 49 targets, and 10 cell lines in common between the Challenge and O'Neil et al.4 datasets, the total number of exact experiments (Drug A–Drug B–Cell line) overlapping is below 100, giving the participants a highly independent validation set for their prediction algorithms. This information was provided to best performing teams in the Challenge, along with a dictionary of curated chemical structures and putative targets for each. Prediction models were trained on the released Challenge dataset and made synergy score predictions on the O'Neil et al. dataset. Metrics for SC1 and SC2 were used to assess prediction performance.
Individual prediction models
Full description and implementation of models used by teams in the final submission to DREAM can be downloaded from:
Synapse.org/AstraZeneca_Sanger_Drug_Combination_Challenge_Leaderboards [http://www.synapse.org/AstraZeneca_Sanger_Drug_Combination_Challenge_Leaderboards]. Top-performing prediction models in SC1 and SC2 made use of genetic features relating to the gene targets of the drugs. Feature selection from the models enabled nomination of putative biomarkers for drug combination synergy (Supplementary Methods).
Ensemble models
SC2 participant models were aggregated using two types of ensemble models Spectral Meta-Learner (SML) and Random Aggregation. SML choses predictions from n methods to aggregate based on an estimation of BAC for each method without using actual labels15,53. Random Aggregation is the traditional way that people aggregate models by giving equal weight to each method. We randomly pick n methods (do this ten times) and for n methods we compute the average BAC and the error.
Monotherapy biomarkers and synergy enrichment
Monotherapy markers are the mutational status of genes, either mutated or copy number altered, from the pan-cancer binary event matrix (BEM)12, which separate the monotherapy response into sensitive vs. non-response. The likelihood of separation was estimated with a Wilcoxon Rank Sum test (Supplementary Methods). From most significant monotherapy marker to lowest in 0.1 steps of –log10(P-value), we accumulative evaluated the percentage of synergistic combinations (synergy score ≥20) with at least one monotherapy marker. This analysis was bootstrapped five times with 80% of the pharmacology data (Supplementary Methods).
Synergy biomarkers
A short list of putative synergy biomarkers were derived from the five highest ranked features of well predicted drug combinations (Pearson r > 0.5) from the two best performers NAD and DMIS. Features were ranked based on their feature weight or importance for given well predicting model. This gene-to-combination short list, was filtered for associations predicted by both teams, or genes biological related to the drug target defined as either the gene being the target itself, a short distance to it in OmniPath signaling network (two molecules up- or downstream) or GO term similarity54 larger than 0.7. This resulted in a list of 47 gene-to-combination associations that we further studied. A gene within this list is considered mutant if it was deleted, amplified (>7 copies) or mutated in any sense, resulting in an extended BEM12. We calculated the P-value for each suggested association with an ANOVA correcting for tissue of origin and multiple hypothesis testing via Benjamini Hochberg. The effect sizes is the mean difference in synergy score between mutant and wild-type cell lines.
For external validation of those putative biomarkers of synergy, we focused on drug combinations in O’Neil et al.4, ALMANAC13, and additional experimental data from AstraZeneca (Supplementary Data 3). We validated biomarkers in two different contexts, (i) for cell lines overlapping with AZ-DREAM, considered as biological replicates, and (ii) cells non-overlapping for predictions on independent cell lines.
Literature evidence for the shortlisted combination-biomarker associations was identified through PubMed search. The aim was to identify published evidence of (i) the combination-biomarker association, (ii) the combination but not the specific biomarker, and (iii) either one of the targets and the biomarker association. The publications were further categorized into in vitro, in vivo, and preclinical studies. Publications that discuss the specific combination-biomarker association have been highlighted in red (Supplementary Data 3). In summary, synergy biomarker were derived from best performer models, and highlighted based external validation, as well as literature support.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
The data used for this study are available from the Genomics of Drug Sensitivity in Cancer (GDSC [http://www.cancerrxgene.org/downloads/]) repository12, the Catalog of Somatic Mutations in Cancer (COSMIC[http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cell_lines]) database55, the European Genome-phenome Archive (EGA) EGAS00001000978, Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) GSE68379, ArrayExpress E-MTAB-3610, Synapse database synapse.org/DrugCombinationChallenge[https://www.synapse.org/DrugCombinationChallenge] and the AstraZeneca Open Innovation Portal openinnovation.astrazeneca.com/data-library.html[https://openinnovation.astrazeneca.com/data-library.html].
Code availability
Full description and source code of all participants in this Challenge can be downloaded from synapse.org/DrugCombinationChallenge[https://www.synapse.org/DrugCombinationChallenge].
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Acknowledgements
We thank the Genomics of Drug Sensitivity in Cancer and COSMIC teams at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute for help with the preparation of the molecular data, Denes Turei for help with Omnipath, and Katjusa Koler for help with matching drug names across combination screens. We thank AstraZeneca for funding and provision of data to the DREAM Consortium to run the challenge, and funding from the European Union Horizon 2020 research (under grant agreement No 668858 PrECISE to J.S.R.), the Joint Research Center for Computational Biomedicine (which is partially funded by Bayer AG) to J.S.R., National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Sheffield Biomedical Research Center, Premium Postdoctoral Fellowship Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. M.G lab is supported by Wellcome Trust (102696 and 206194).
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M.P.M., D.W., T.Y., I.S.J., T.No, G.Y.D., S.F., G.S., J.G., J.R.D., and J.S.R. designed the challenge. The top-performing approach was designed by Y.G. Data analysis for the top-performing approach was conducted by M.P.M,. D.W., M.M., B.S., K.C.B., J.K., M.J., R.W., T.Ng, and M.Z. The DREAM Consortium provided drug synergy and biomarker predictions, as well as method implementations and descriptions. M.P.M., D.W., M.M., T.Y., E.C.N., R.V., and M.E.A. performed analysis of challenge predictions. M.P.M., D.W., M.M., B.S., and K.C.B. interpreted the results of the challenge and performed follow-up analyses for the manuscript. E.K.Y.T., M.J.G., Z.G., and S.F. generated experimental data. M.P.M., D.W., Y.G., M.M., B.S., K.C.B., T.Y., J.K., M.J., R.W., T.Ng, M.Z., I.S.J., J.G., J.R.D., and J.S.R. wrote the manuscript. J.G., J.R.D., and J.S.R. supervised the project.
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K.C.B., Z.G., G.Y.D., E.K.Y.T., S.F., and J.R.D. are AstraZeneca employees. K.C.B., Z.G., E.K.Y.T., S.F., and J.R.D. are AstraZeneca shareholders. Y.G. receives personal compensation from Eli Lilly and Company, is a shareholder of Cleerly, Inc., and Ann Arbor Algorithms, Inc. M.G. receives research funding from AstraZeneca and has performed consultancy for Sanofi. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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Menden, M.P., Wang, D., Mason, M.J. et al. Community assessment to advance computational prediction of cancer drug combinations in a pharmacogenomic screen. Nat Commun 10, 2674 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-09799-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-09799-2
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