4.8 Review

Enhancing Reproducibility in Cancer Drug Screening: How Do We Move Forward?

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 74, Issue 15, Pages 4016-4023

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-0725

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Funding

  1. Yale University
  2. United States National Institute of Health [UM1 CA186644]
  3. Villum Kann Rasmussen Foundation
  4. Klarman Family Foundation
  5. US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [CA087969]
  6. NIH National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01CA80065]
  7. NIH [U54 CA149147, R01 CA131465]
  8. NCI GAME-ON Cancer Post-GWAS initiative [5U19 CA148065]
  9. NHLBI [5R01HL111759]
  10. Gattuso Slaight Personalized Cancer Medicine Fund at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Large-scale pharmacogenomic high-throughput screening (HTS) studies hold great potential for generating robust genomic predictors of drug response. Two recent large-scale HTS studies have reported results of such screens, revealing several known and novel drug sensitivities and biomarkers. Subsequent evaluation, however, found only moderate interlaboratory concordance in the drug response phenotypes, possibly due to differences in the experimental protocols used in the two studies. This highlights the need for community-wide implementation of standardized assays for measuring drug response phenotypes so that the full potential of HTS is realized. We suggest that the path forward is to establish best practices and standardization of the critical steps in these assays through a collective effort to ensure that the data produced from large-scale screens would not only be of high intrastudy consistency, so that they could be replicated and compared successfully across multiple laboratories. (C)2014 AACR.

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