Independent Drug Action in Combination Therapy: Implications for Precision Oncology
Publication information:
Plana, D., Palmer, A. & Sorger, P. Independent Drug Action in Combination Therapy: Implications for Precision Oncology. Cancer Discov (2022) doi:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0212.
Abstract
Combination therapies are superior to monotherapy for many cancers. This advantage was historically ascribed to the ability of combinations to address tumor heterogeneity, but synergistic interaction is now a common explanation as well as a design criterion for new combinations. We review evidence that independent drug action, described in 1961, explains the efficacy of many practice-changing combination therapies: it provides populations of patients with heterogeneous drug sensitivities multiple chances of benefit from at least one drug. Understanding response heterogeneity could reveal predictive or pharmacodynamic biomarkers for more precise use of existing drugs and realize the benefits of additivity or synergy.