A new computational strategy paves the way for more personalized cancer treatment

05/15/2018

Mathematicians and cancer scientists have found a way to simplify complex biomolecular data about tumors, in principle making it easier to prescribe the appropriate treatment for a specific patient.

The digital approach from scientists at the Johns Hopkins University—a computational strategy transforms highly complex information into a simplified format that emphasizes patient-to-patient variation in the molecular signatures of cancer cells—was detailed recently in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“The main point of this paper was to introduce this methodology,” said Donald Geman, a professor in JHU’s Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and senior author of the PNAS article. “And it also reports on some preliminary experiments using the method to distinguish between closely related cancer phenotypes.”

A key challenge for doctors is that each primary form of cancer, such as breast or prostate, may have multiple subtypes, each of which responds differently to a given treatment.

“One of the things that people in this field have noticed over the past 10 years—and, in fact, it has been startling—is how much heterogeneity there is even between two patients with the same subtype of cancer.”

 

Don Geman
Johns Hopkins researcher

“One of the things that people in this field have noticed over the past 10 years—and, in fact, it has been startling—is how much heterogeneity there is even between two patients with the same subtype of cancer,” Geman said. “By that, I mean that in two patients who were both diagnosed with melanoma, the skin lesions may look quite similar to the naked eye, but the cancerous cells may be very different at the molecular level. They may have different forms of dysregulation, including different genetic variants and different gene expression profiles.”

Knowing as much as possible about the genetic makeup and impaired biological pathways of a particular patient could help physicians make more informed decisions about the prognosis and treatment, adjusting them to the particular molecular profile.

“They want to know if they are looking at a profile of a woman who likely will or will not respond to a particular drug,” Geman said. “Or does the data indicate the patient will likely relapse within the next five years? Or does a man have a particularly aggressive type of prostate cancer? Or is it necessary to surgically remove the lymph nodes to determine the presence or absence of metastases in a patient with some form of head and neck cancer?”

To help provide answers, Geman and his team envisioned something similar to the bloodwork summaries commonly produced when a patient visits a doctor for an annual physical exam. These generally report whether blood sugar, cholesterol, and other results are within or are outside of healthy levels. Taking a cue from these tests, Geman’s team found a way to greatly simplify the data on tens of thousands of molecular states by converting these data to binary labels, indicating whether a measurement falls within or beyond healthy levels.

Geman, who previously devoted many years to improving computer vision technology, is encouraged by the cancer-related project and hopes it will serve as a model for other fruitful collaborations involving advanced math and medicine.

“The goal,” he said, “is taking classification problems of genuine clinical interest and producing an algorithm that is accurate, interpretable, and makes sense biologically.”

Co-lead authors of the PNAS article were Wikum Dinalankara, an oncology fellow at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; and graduate student Qian Ke of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics in the university’s Whiting School of Engineering. Co-authors from these two departments were Yiran Xu, Lanlan Ji, Nicole Pagane, Anching Lien, Tejasvi Matam, Elana J. Fertig, Laurent Younes, and Luigi Marchionni. Another co-author, Nathan D. Price, was from the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle.

Funding for this research was provided by National Cancer Institute grant R01CA200859.

Donald Geman is a core faculty member of the Institute for Computational Medicine. This article first appeared in The Hub.

JHU - Institute for Computational Medicine