Tackling heterogeneity in treatment-resistant breast cancer using a broad-spectrum therapeutic approach

Cancer Drug Resist. 2022 Oct 12;5(4):917-925. doi: 10.20517/cdr.2022.40. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Tumor heterogeneity can contribute to the development of therapeutic resistance in cancer, including advanced breast cancers. The object of the Halifax project was to identify new treatments that would address mechanisms of therapeutic resistance through tumor heterogeneity by uncovering combinations of therapeutics that could target the hallmarks of cancer rather than focusing on individual gene products. A taskforce of 180 cancer researchers, used molecular profiling to highlight key targets responsible for each of the hallmarks of cancer and then find existing therapeutic agents that could be used to reach those targets with limited toxicity. In many cases, natural health products and re-purposed pharmaceuticals were identified as potential agents. Hence, by combining the molecular profiling of tumors with therapeutics that target the hallmark features of cancer, the heterogeneity of advanced-stage breast cancers can be addressed.

Keywords: Breast cancer; chemoresistance; drug resistance; targeted therapy.