News Release

Stanford/Packard scientists find new uses for existing drugs by mining gene-activity data banks

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Stanford Medicine

STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have paired up medicines and maladies with help from a molecular "Match.com." When the scientists applied an "opposites attract" algorithm to publicly available databases, surprising sparks flew: They found potential compatibilities between numerous existing drugs and diseases for which those drugs had never before been thought to be beneficial.

So far, preclinical tests have borne out at least two of these findings: Cimetidine — a widely used, cheap, over-the-counter anti-ulcer drug — may be a good fit for a form of lung cancer; and topiramate — an off-patent anti-seizure drug with a solid safety profile — may be therapeutic for inflammatory bowel disease.

Scientists led by Atul Butte, MD, PhD, associate professor of systems medicine in pediatrics, combed public databases with a sophisticated computer algorithm and identified numerous drug-and-disease pairs that may have a therapeutic future together. The coupling is based on the opposing directions in which a given disease and a given drug alter various genes' activity in tissues.

The results of this new study establish proof of principle for an approach that could significantly speed progress in combating difficult diseases with drugs that are already approved for other indications (a procedure called drug repositioning). They will be published online Aug. 17 in two separate studies (one each for the cimetidine and topiramate findings) in Science Translational Medicine. Butte, who is also director of the Center for Pediatric Bioinformatics at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, is the senior author of both studies.

What may be most counterintuitive of all, Butte said, is the degree to which a drug that is effective in a disorder, for instance epilepsy, may prove effective in one disorder as seemingly different as, say, Crohn's disease. Likewise, one wouldn't ordinarily assume an ulcer drug might be useful in fighting lung cancer.

But such leaps do occur in the medical world, albeit typically by accident instead of by systematic search. To name one popular example, a compound originally developed for heart problems turned out to be effective for erectile dysfunction and, eventually, for a severe lung disorder called pulmonary hypertension. That drug, sildenafil, is more commonly known by its brand name, Viagra.

In the early 2000s, Butte began assembling a systematic way to mine the wealth of underused information in public databases. "I was wondering: Can we predict these intersections, instead of stumbling across them?" he said.

The working hypothesis was simple, said Butte: "If a drug exerts a change on gene-activity pattern that is opposite to that exerted by a disease, then that drug may have a therapeutic effect on that disease."

Many studies aim to determine which of the approximately 30,000 genes contained in each cell of a given tissue are working hardest and which are quiescent. Every disease or drug affects cells' overall pattern of gene activity in its own way, pointing at genes that may be important in that disease's or drug's effects on that tissue.

New technologies have rendered routine the simultaneous measurement of activity levels of every gene in a cell or tissue. Today there are 750,000 results of such analyses in publicly available databases, nearly a 30-fold increase since 2004, said Butte. "For various reasons, very few scientists use the data that's already entered. So we thought we'd make use of this info."

The Stanford researchers restricted their database search to analyses in which human biopsy samples and normal tissues, or drugged and non-drugged samples, were compared in the same experiment, yielding more-accurate comparisons. About 100 diseases and 164 approved drugs met this narrow criterion. (That was five years ago, when the search now being reported began. The same screen initiated today, Butte said, would deliver profiles on about 1,500 diseases and more than 300 drugs.)

Butte's algorithm grouped diseases by how they changed gene activity instead of by the organ affected, and then paired them off against drugs whose gene-activity effects opposed those changes. Just like that celebrated little old lady of yore, the yenta, the algorithm suggested matches that, however startling, would prove to be made in heaven.

Butte's team chose two seemingly oddball pairings: cimetidine, an ulcer drug, for adenocarcinoma of the lung, which accounts for about 30-40 percent of all lung cancers; and topiramate, an anti-seizure drug, for Crohn's disease, an inflammatory bowel disorder.

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The first author of the cimetidine study was Butte's graduate student Marina Sirota, PhD, now at Pfizer. Cimetidine's "matching score" vis-à-vis lung adenocarcinoma compared favorably with that of an approved lung-cancer drug, gefitinib. So the Stanford researchers tested its therapeutic potential in a classic animal model obtained from the Stanford Cancer Institute. They showed that cimetidine inhibited the growth of tumors formed by lung-cancer cells grafted onto mice that lack immune systems and are therefore unable to reject cancer-cell grafts. Applied directly to lung-cancer cells in a dish, cimetidine diminished those cells' proliferation and increased their tendency to die spontaneously.

The topiramate study's first author was Joel Dudley, PhD. Crohn's disease is one of the most common and serious manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease, which affects more than 1 million individuals in North America. There are no known cures for Crohn's, and current treatments for relieving symptoms can have severe side effects or be quite costly. Topiramate scored about as well as steroids, a well-known existing treatment, on Butte's drug-disease algorithm. The team then tested this drug in a rodent model of Crohn's disease, assessing topiramate's healing effect as measured by inspecting the tissue by endoscopy or microscopy. By these measures, topiramate clearly had a beneficial effect. Physical symptoms such as diarrhea also improved.

Butte serves on the scientific advisory board of NuMedii, a startup company that aims to commercialize some of the technologies used in this research. Co-founded by Dudley, the company hopes to use the results of this pair of studies to help find funding sources that will enable it to use the new approach to get both on- and off-patent compounds into the right clinical trials.

The National Institute of General Medical Sciences, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and PhRMA Foundation provided funding for the studies. Other Stanford co-authors were Pankaj Jay Pasricha, MD, professor of gastroenterology; Mohan Shenoy, MD, basic life science research associate; assistant professor Alejandro Sweet-Cordero, MD, and associate professor Julien Sage, PhD, both of pediatric cancer biology; assistant professor of pathology Reetesh Pai, MD; Minnie Sarwal, MD, PhD, professor of pediatric nephrology; pediatrics postdoctoral researcher Silke Roedder, PharmD, PhD; graduate student Alex Morgan; research associate Jeewon Kim, PhD; and Annie Chiang, PhD, a former postdoctoral researcher.

Information about Stanford medical school's departments of Pediatrics and of Medicine, which supported the work, is available at http://pediatrics.stanford.edu/ and http://medicine.stanford.edu/, respectively.

The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks among the nation's top medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about the school, please visit http://mednews.stanford.edu. The medical school is part of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. For information about all three, please visit http://stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html.

Celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2011, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital is annually ranked as one of the nation's best pediatric hospitals by U.S. News & World Report, and is the only San Francisco Bay Area children's hospital with programs ranked in the U.S. News Top Ten. The 311-bed hospital is devoted to the care of children and expectant mothers, and provides pediatric and obstetric medical and surgical services in association with the Stanford University School of Medicine. Packard Children's offers patients locally, regionally and nationally a full range of health-care programs and services, from preventive and routine care to the diagnosis and treatment of serious illness and injury. For more information, visit www.lpch.org.


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