Systems and Precision Cancer Medicine Group

Dr Anguraj Sadanandam’s Group is investigating methods to classify pancreatic-, colorectal-, breast- and multiple other cancer patients into clinically relevant subgroups.

Professor Anguraj Sadanandam

Group Leader:

Systems and Precision Cancer Medicine anguraj sandanandam

Professor Sadanandam applies the multidisciplinary experience both in the wet-lab and computational biology to identify and test personalised therapies for different cancer types.

Researchers in this group

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Email: [email protected]

Location: Sutton

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Phone: +44 20 3437 6920

Email: [email protected]

Location: Sutton

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Location: Sutton

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Phone: +44 20 8722 4337

Email: [email protected]

Location: Sutton

Professor Anguraj Sadanandam's group have written 34 publications

Most recent new publication 6/2017

See all their publications

Research, projects and publications in this group

We systematically study tumour and immune/stromal heterogeneity by developing innovative artificial intelligence and machine-learning models to concurrently integrate multi-omics with phenome data.

Cancers are highly heterogeneous at molecular and phenotypic levels that it is essential to stratify these cancer patients for personalised cancer diagnosis and therapy.

To this end, my laboratory’s efforts build on our pioneering molecular stratification in different cancers including colorectal and pancreatic cancers. Nevertheless, we have specific projects in gastroesophageal, breast and pan-cancers (see high impact publications).

We systematically study tumour and immune/stromal heterogeneity by developing innovative artificial intelligence and machine-learning models to concurrently integrate multi-omics with phenome data. Multi-omics data include, but not limited to, image, transcriptome, genome and methylome. Phenome data include clinical outcomes and in vitro/in vivo data such as proliferation, migration, etc.

This careful, systematic approach of integration generates biomarkers and highly probable hypotheses for personalised cancer therapy.

Later, biomarkers are translated to potential molecular assays and tested in the clinic trial/study samples. Similarly, certain hypotheses are validated using mechanism-based pre-clinical cell line and mouse models and experiments.

This approach streamlines solutions to evolving areas in the field of multidisciplinary science including inter/intra-tumoural heterogeneity, companion diagnostic assay development, deconvolution statistical approaches, cell-of-origin/phenotypes-based evolution of tumour, and pre-clinical trials for modelling precision cancer therapy.

Translational cancer research and patient benefit

As a part of the ICR, my interdisciplinary (integrated experimental, computational and clinical biology) laboratory’s research focuses on translational cancer research and patient benefit and leverages national and international clinical trial and tissue resources. Our programme has three overlapping research themes:

1) defining clinically actionable inter/intra-tumoural heterogeneity by systematically integrating multi-omics profiles with phenome data;

2) developing prognostic and/or predictive biomarker-based companion diagnostic assays by dissecting tumour or drug-induced cancer heterogeneity; and

3) identifying and validating subtype-specific drug targets and therapies, specifically those involving immune/stroma pathways, for potential personalised/precision medicine.

Our research is deliberately interdisciplinary to maximise and expedite clinical translation and patient benefit.

Therefore, the existing group, along with clinical collaborators, has three key multidisciplinary components: basic/translational science (pre-clinical and mechanism-based experimental biology; and “Big” data generation); computational biology (development of artificial intelligence and machine learning tools and data analysis); and clinical science (companion diagnostics development; and collaboration-based clinical trial/study-relevant patient samples and data collection).

Our strategic national and international collaborations with industry, large consortia (such as the Colorectal Cancer Subtyping Consortium; CRCSC), leading clinicians across different continents and trial units, bioinformaticians, and biologists support and add value to my laboratory’s activities at the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR).

Furthermore, and focused on patient benefit, we have created an ICR-approved platform to make our companion diagnostic assays (patented already) available internationally for academic research purposes in collaboration.

Finally, we have developed novel bioinformatics and preclinical models, as resources, which are widely and internationally used. Moreover, our lab coordinates multiple cancer research projects related to Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC) specifically related to India.

Our lab is exploring entrepreneurship through various resources for both Sadanandam and group members.

Overall, our groupscience-based research programme aligns well with the ICR/RMH Strategies, the UK’s and international key life sciences strategies, and developing a skilled workforce in interdisciplinary sciences including training clinicians/other disciplinarians in genomic pathology.

Integrated analysis of high-throughput molecular and metabolic profiles to develop pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma subtype-specific therapy

Overall survival of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) patients is less than 6 months from the time of diagnosis. Currently, patients with advanced or metastatic diseases are treated with gemicitabine, and have only a modest increase in survival. These attributes may reflect the variable and often disappointing responses seen when deploying therapeutic agents in unselected PDAC populations, despite occasional significant responses. Studies in other solid tumours have shown that heterogeneity in therapeutic responses can be anticipated by molecular differences between tumours, and targeting drugs specific to tumour subtypes in which they are predicted to be selectively effective can indeed improve treatment. Seeking to extend this new paradigm, we recently reported three gene expression subtypes of PDA named as classical, quasi-mesenchymal; QM-PDA and exocrine-like PDA using a gene expression signature (62 genes; designated as PDAssigner; Collisson and Sadanandam, et al. Nature Medicine, 2011; co-first author). Interestingly, patients with classical tumours fared better than patients with QM-PDA tumours after resection. We also observed that QM-PDA subtype cell lines are, on average, more sensitive to gemcitabine than the classical subtype lines. The opposite relationship is observed with erlotinib. Along this line, we are interested in characterising the distinct metabolic, genetic and cellular phenotypes of PDA subtypes and their influence on drug responses (precision and personalised medicine) involving wet-lab and bioinformatics by integrating high-throughput molecular and metabolic profiles and correlating the mixed signatures to that of the therapeutic responses.

Characterising colorectal cancer subtypes and integrated analysis of molecular profiles to identify precise therapies

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease that is traditionally classified based on genomic (microsatellite, MSI; or chromosomal instability, CIN) or epigenomic (CpG island methylator phenotype, CIMP) status. In order to achieve a robust and clinically useful means of classification, we performed a novel combination of consensus-based unsupervised clustering of gene expression profiles from patient tumours (n > 1000) to find subtypes within these samples. In total, we identified five integrated CRC subtypes with differential gene expression signatures and prognosis. Namely, we predicted and validated the cellular origin of our subtypes and associated this and the drug responses in order to guide cellular signalling pathway- and mechanism based therapeutic strategies that target subtype-specific tumours. In addition, we also associated our subtypes with (i) MSI status, (ii) Wnt signaling pathway activity, (iii) metastasis to distant organs and (iv) response to targeted and chemotherapy (Sadanandam, et. al., Nature Medicine, 2013). The personalised response of the subtypes to targeted- or chemo-therapy were validated using cell lines in vitro and mouse (xenograft and genetically engineered; cross-species analysis) models in vivo. We will use systems biology approach to extend the characterisation of CRC subtypes in order to facilitate personalised medicine for this devastating disease. In addition, we are interested in understanding cetuximab- and anti-angiogenic therapeutic agents-based adaptive drug resistance in colorectal cancer.

Developing assays using gene signatures that distinguish different subtypes in the clinic

Assigning individual patients to different molecular subtypes require assays that can be used in the clinic. We have developed an exploratory RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry assays that distinguish different subtypes of CRC. Currently, we are interested in further improving these assays and also, developing novel assays involving nCounter platform (Nanostrings Technologies).

Characterising consensus tissue-independent molecular subtypes from different epithelial cancers

We have recently identified subtypes using multiple epithelial type cancers that are independent of tissue specific genes. These subtypes were found to have differential drug responses. We are interested in further characterising these subtypes.

Industrial partnership opportunities with this group

Opportunity: Molecular subtyping and predictive test for personalising colorectal cancer

Commissioner: Professor Anguraj Sadanandam

Recent discoveries from this group

08/03/21

Colourful stained tissue section of a bowel tumour

Image: Stained bowel tumour section. Credit: Dr David Mansfield, Higher Scientific Officer at the ICR

Cancers that are resistant to radiotherapy could be rendered susceptible through treatment with immunotherapy, a new study suggests.

Manipulating bowel cancers based on their ‘immune landscape’ could unlock new ways to treat resistant tumours.

Cancers can evolve resistance to radiotherapy just as they do with drugs.

The new study found that profiling the immune landscape of cancers before therapy could identify patients who are likely to respond to radiotherapy off the bat, and others who might benefit from priming of their tumour with immunotherapy.

Inflammation predicts radiotherapy response

Scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, in collaboration with the University of Leeds and The Francis Crick Institute, studied inflammation in bowel tumour samples taken before and after radiotherapy from 53 patients. They aimed to understand how tumour immune activity before and after radiotherapy differs between patients who respond well and those who respond poorly to treatment.

The study is published in the Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer and was supported by the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and the ICR, and the Medical Research Council.

The team showed that the effectiveness of radiotherapy partly depends on the level of inflammation within tumours before and after treatment.

In the study, patients who showed a poor response to radiotherapy – with no substantial falls in numbers of tumour cells – started with chronically inflamed tumours, with high levels of activity in 40 immune genes. The level of inflammation within their tumours showed minimal changes following radiotherapy.

In contrast, good responders – who saw a marked drop in the number of tumour cells during radiotherapy – started with a relatively low inflammation tumour landscape which revved up following treatment. Here, there was a significant increase in the activity of 198 immune genes including genes representing immune cells that can directly kill tumour cells.

Careful timing of immunotherapy alongside radiotherapy could unlock resistant cancers

Together, the findings show that carefully timing a combination of immunotherapy and radiotherapy, based on an assessment of the cancer’s immune landscape, could provide a way forward for treating resistant cancers.

Although the study was carried out specifically in bowel cancer the researchers believe the findings could be relevant for other types of the disease too, particularly for cancers where surgery is not an option and radiotherapy is particularly important.

Increasing evidence shows that radiotherapy not only works by causing DNA damage and cell death in cancer cells but also in potentially a similar way to a vaccine – priming the immune system to recognise tumour cells and ramp up an immune response to attack them.

This work is part of growing activity at the ICR and in radiotherapy and immunology which includes the RadNet radiotherapy research network, in collaboration with The Royal Marsden.

We greatly appreciate the generous individuals, trusts and companies who choose to invest in the full range of our activities, from start-up costs for new research teams, to research positions, buildings, equipment and training the next generation of cancer researchers

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Immunotherapy and radiotherapy could prove a highly potent mixture

Study leader Dr Anguraj Sadanandam, leader of the Systems and Precision Cancer Medicine Team at the ICR, said:

"Radiotherapy has revolutionised cancer treatment and is the most effective way of curing cancer other than surgery.

“Our study has shown that the immune landscape and levels of inflammation within cancers is crucial to determining how they respond to radiotherapy. It suggests that combining radiotherapy with immunotherapy could prove a highly potent mixture – improving our ability to eliminate hard-to-treat cancers further still.

“Now we want to improve our understanding of how to combine and sequence radiotherapy and immunotherapy together to maximise the treatment response for the individual biology of each patient.”

Study co-author Dr Anna Wilkins, Clinical Research Fellow in the Clinical Trials and Statistics Unit at the ICR, now at The Francis Crick Institute, said:

“Radiotherapy is an important curative treatment option for many patients with cancer. We are starting to understand how the immune response is important for radiotherapy to work most effectively.

“Our study suggests that by targeting specific non-cancer cells that block this immune response we can further improve radiotherapy responses in patients.”

Dr Nick West, Clinical Academic Fellow at the University of Leeds and Honorary Consultant in Gastrointestinal Pathology, said:

“Radiotherapy is commonly used in patients with rectal cancer and there are currently no validated biomarkers that reliably predict how well the cancer will respond. Patients who do not respond well to radiotherapy may still experience significant side effects despite no clinical benefit.

“This study suggests that we can potentially improve the response in these patients through modulation of the immune system, which is a very exciting development. The study also showed that a novel technique developed at the University of Leeds, tumour cell density, can be used to objectively measure the degree of tumour response to radiotherapy.”

Tuning the radiotherapy response through immunotherapy

Professor Paul Workman, Chief Executive of the ICR said:

“This fascinating study adds to the evidence that the effectiveness of radiotherapy is closely intertwined with the involvement of the immune system. It’s now clear that the radiotherapy response in cancer cells and surrounding tissues can empower a patient’s own immune system to recognise and destroy their tumour.

“But radiotherapy requires a healthy immune response, and the new research suggests we might need to tune that response through immunotherapy. It could provide a foundation for future trials to test new combinations of drugs, including immunotherapies alongside radiotherapy.”

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