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Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank

Drug-induced cardiotoxicity (DICT) is a major concern in drug development, accounting for 10–14% of postmarket withdrawals. In this study, we explored the capabilities of various chemical and biological data to predict cardiotoxicity, using the recently released Drug-Induced Cardiotoxicity Rank (DIC...

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Autores principales: Seal, Srijit, Spjuth, Ola, Hosseini-Gerami, Layla, García-Ortegón, Miguel, Singh, Shantanu, Bender, Andreas, Carpenter, Anne E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10614794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37905146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.15.562398
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author Seal, Srijit
Spjuth, Ola
Hosseini-Gerami, Layla
García-Ortegón, Miguel
Singh, Shantanu
Bender, Andreas
Carpenter, Anne E.
author_facet Seal, Srijit
Spjuth, Ola
Hosseini-Gerami, Layla
García-Ortegón, Miguel
Singh, Shantanu
Bender, Andreas
Carpenter, Anne E.
author_sort Seal, Srijit
collection PubMed
description Drug-induced cardiotoxicity (DICT) is a major concern in drug development, accounting for 10–14% of postmarket withdrawals. In this study, we explored the capabilities of various chemical and biological data to predict cardiotoxicity, using the recently released Drug-Induced Cardiotoxicity Rank (DICTrank) dataset from the United States FDA. We analyzed a diverse set of data sources, including physicochemical properties, annotated mechanisms of action (MOA), Cell Painting, Gene Expression, and more, to identify indications of cardiotoxicity. We found that such data, including protein targets, especially those related to ion channels (such as hERG), physicochemical properties (such as electrotopological state) as well as peak concentration in plasma offer strong predictive ability as well as valuable insights into DICT. We also found compounds annotated with particular mechanisms of action, such as cyclooxygenase inhibition, could distinguish between most-concern and no-concern DICT compounds. Cell Painting features related to ER stress discern the most-concern cardiotoxic compounds from non-toxic compounds. While models based on physicochemical properties currently provide substantial predictive accuracy (AUCPR = 0.93), this study also underscores the potential benefits of incorporating more comprehensive biological data in future DICT predictive models. With the availability of - omics data in the future, using biological data promises enhanced predictability and delivers deeper mechanistic insights, paving the way for safer therapeutic drug development. All models and data used in this study are publicly released at https://broad.io/DICTrank_Predictor
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spelling pubmed-106147942023-10-31 Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank Seal, Srijit Spjuth, Ola Hosseini-Gerami, Layla García-Ortegón, Miguel Singh, Shantanu Bender, Andreas Carpenter, Anne E. bioRxiv Article Drug-induced cardiotoxicity (DICT) is a major concern in drug development, accounting for 10–14% of postmarket withdrawals. In this study, we explored the capabilities of various chemical and biological data to predict cardiotoxicity, using the recently released Drug-Induced Cardiotoxicity Rank (DICTrank) dataset from the United States FDA. We analyzed a diverse set of data sources, including physicochemical properties, annotated mechanisms of action (MOA), Cell Painting, Gene Expression, and more, to identify indications of cardiotoxicity. We found that such data, including protein targets, especially those related to ion channels (such as hERG), physicochemical properties (such as electrotopological state) as well as peak concentration in plasma offer strong predictive ability as well as valuable insights into DICT. We also found compounds annotated with particular mechanisms of action, such as cyclooxygenase inhibition, could distinguish between most-concern and no-concern DICT compounds. Cell Painting features related to ER stress discern the most-concern cardiotoxic compounds from non-toxic compounds. While models based on physicochemical properties currently provide substantial predictive accuracy (AUCPR = 0.93), this study also underscores the potential benefits of incorporating more comprehensive biological data in future DICT predictive models. With the availability of - omics data in the future, using biological data promises enhanced predictability and delivers deeper mechanistic insights, paving the way for safer therapeutic drug development. All models and data used in this study are publicly released at https://broad.io/DICTrank_Predictor Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10614794/ /pubmed/37905146 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.15.562398 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Seal, Srijit
Spjuth, Ola
Hosseini-Gerami, Layla
García-Ortegón, Miguel
Singh, Shantanu
Bender, Andreas
Carpenter, Anne E.
Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title_full Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title_fullStr Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title_full_unstemmed Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title_short Insights into Drug Cardiotoxicity from Biological and Chemical Data: The First Public Classifiers for FDA DICTrank
title_sort insights into drug cardiotoxicity from biological and chemical data: the first public classifiers for fda dictrank
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10614794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37905146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.15.562398
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