Role of synergy and antagonism in designing multidrug adaptive chemotherapy schedules

2021 
Chemotherapeutic resistance via the mechanism of competitive release of resistant tumor cell subpopulations is a major problem associated with cancer treatments and one of the main causes of tumor recurrence. Often, chemoresistance is mitigated by using multidrug schedules (two or more combination therapies) that can act synergistically, additively, or antagonistically on the heterogeneous population of cells as they evolve. In this paper, we develop a three-component evolutionary game theory model to design two-drug adaptive schedules that mitigate chemoresistance and delay tumor recurrence in an evolving collection of tumor cells with two resistant subpopulations and one chemosensitive population that has a higher baseline fitness but is not resistant to either drug. Using the nonlinear replicator dynamical system with a payoff matrix of Prisoner's Dilemma (PD) type (enforcing a cost to resistance), we investigate the nonlinear dynamics of this three-component system along with an additional tumor growth model whose growth rate is a function of the fitness landscape of the tumor cell populations. A key parameter determines whether the two drugs interact synergistically, additively, or antagonistically. We show that antagonistic drug interactions generally result in slower rates of adaptation of the resistant cells than synergistic ones, making them more effective in combating the evolution of resistance. We then design evolutionary cycles (closed loops) in the three-component phase space by shaping the fitness landscape of the cell populations (i.e., altering the evolutionary stable states of the game) using appropriately designed time-dependent schedules (adaptive therapy), altering the dosages and timing of the two drugs. We describe two key bifurcations associated with our drug interaction parameter which help explain why antagonistic interactions are more effective at controlling competitive release of the resistant population than synergistic interactions in the context of an evolving tumor.
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