Open Access
Optimal control of a mathematical model for cancer chemotherapy under tumor heterogeneity
Author(s) -
Shuo Wang,
Heinz Schättler
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
mathematical biosciences and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.451
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1551-0018
pISSN - 1547-1063
DOI - 10.3934/mbe.2016040
Subject(s) - optimal control , singular control , mathematics , a priori and a posteriori , computation , time horizon , population , dimension (graph theory) , singular perturbation , mathematical optimization , constant (computer programming) , computer science , mathematical analysis , medicine , algorithm , combinatorics , philosophy , environmental health , epistemology , programming language
We consider cancer chemotherapy as an optimal control problem with the aim to minimize a combination of the tumor volume and side effects over an a priori specified therapy horizon when the tumor consists of a heterogeneous agglomeration of many subpopulations. The mathematical model, which accounts for different growth and apoptosis rates in the presence of cell densities, is a finite-dimensional approximation of a model originally formulated by Lorz et al. [18,19] and Greene et al. [10,11] with a continuum of possible traits. In spite of an arbitrarily high dimension, for this problem singular controls (which correspond to time-varying administration schedules at less than maximum doses) can be computed explicitly in feedback form. Interestingly, these controls have the property to keep the entire tumor population constant. Numerical computations and simulations that explore the optimality of bang-bang and singular controls are given. These point to the optimality of protocols that combine a full dose therapy segment with a period of lower dose drug administration.