RESUMO
Combination therapy is widely used in cancer medicine due to the benefits of drug synergy and the reduction of acquired resistance. To minimize emergent toxicities, nanomedicines containing drug combinations are being developed, and they have shown encouraging results. However, developing multi-drug loaded nanoparticles is highly complex and lacks predictability. Previously, it was shown that single drugs can self-assemble with near-infrared dye, IR783, to form cancer-targeted nanoparticles. A structure-based predictive model showed that only 4% of the drug space self-assembles with IR783. Here, we mapped the self-assembly outcomes of 77 small molecule drugs and drug pairs with IR783. We found that the small molecule drug space can be divided into five types, and type-1 drugs self-assemble with three out of four possible drug types that do not form stable nanoparticles. To predict the self-assembly outcome of any drug pair, we developed a machine learning model based on decision trees, which was trained and tested with F1-scores of 89.3% and 87.2%, respectively. We used literature text mining to capture drug pairs with biological synergy together with synergistic chemical self-assembly and generated a database with 1985 drug pairs for 70 cancers. We developed an online search tool to identify cancer-specific, meta-synergistic drug pairs (both chemical and biological synergism) and validated three different pairs in vitro. Lastly, we discovered a novel meta-synergistic pair, bortezomib-cabozantinib, which formed stable nanoparticles with improved biodistribution, efficacy, and reduced toxicity, even over single drugs, in an in vivo model of head and neck cancer.