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DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations

Background: Drug repurposing provides an effective method for high-speed, low-risk drug development. Clinical phenotype-based screening exceeded target-based approaches in discovering first-in-class small-molecule drugs. However, most of these approaches predict only binary phenotypic associations b...

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Autores principales: Lu, Lu, Qin, Jiale, Chen, Jiandong, Wu, Hao, Zhao, Qiang, Miyano, Satoru, Zhang, Yaozhong, Yu, Hua, Li, Chen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8809407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126114
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.772026
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author Lu, Lu
Qin, Jiale
Chen, Jiandong
Wu, Hao
Zhao, Qiang
Miyano, Satoru
Zhang, Yaozhong
Yu, Hua
Li, Chen
author_facet Lu, Lu
Qin, Jiale
Chen, Jiandong
Wu, Hao
Zhao, Qiang
Miyano, Satoru
Zhang, Yaozhong
Yu, Hua
Li, Chen
author_sort Lu, Lu
collection PubMed
description Background: Drug repurposing provides an effective method for high-speed, low-risk drug development. Clinical phenotype-based screening exceeded target-based approaches in discovering first-in-class small-molecule drugs. However, most of these approaches predict only binary phenotypic associations between drugs and diseases; the types of drug and diseases have not been well exploited. Principally, the clinical phenotypes of a known drug can be divided into indications (Is), side effects (SEs), and contraindications (CIs). Incorporating these different clinical phenotypes of drug–disease associations (DDAs) can improve the prediction accuracy of the DDAs. Methods: We develop Drug Disease Interaction Type (DDIT), a user-friendly online predictor that supports drug repositioning by submitting known Is, SEs, and CIs for a target drug of interest. The dataset for Is, SEs, and CIs was extracted from PREDICT, SIDER, and MED-RT, respectively. To unify the names of the drugs and diseases, we mapped their names to the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) ontology using Rest API. We then integrated multiple clinical phenotypes into a conditional restricted Boltzmann machine (RBM) enabling the identification of different phenotypes of drug–disease associations, including the prediction of as yet unknown DDAs in the input. Results: By 10-fold cross-validation, we demonstrate that DDIT can effectively capture the latent features of the drug–disease association network and represents over 0.217 and over 0.072 improvement in AUC and AUPR, respectively, for predicting the clinical phenotypes of DDAs compared with the classic K-nearest neighbors method (KNN, including drug-based KNN and disease-based KNN), Random Forest, and XGBoost. By conducting leave-one-drug-class-out cross-validation, the AUC and AUPR of DDIT demonstrated an improvement of 0.135 in AUC and 0.075 in AUPR compared to any of the other four methods. Within the top 10 predicted indications, side effects, and contraindications, 7/10, 9/10, and 9/10 hit known drug–disease associations. Overall, DDIT is a useful tool for predicting multiple clinical phenotypic types of drug–disease associations.
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spelling pubmed-88094072022-02-03 DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations Lu, Lu Qin, Jiale Chen, Jiandong Wu, Hao Zhao, Qiang Miyano, Satoru Zhang, Yaozhong Yu, Hua Li, Chen Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Background: Drug repurposing provides an effective method for high-speed, low-risk drug development. Clinical phenotype-based screening exceeded target-based approaches in discovering first-in-class small-molecule drugs. However, most of these approaches predict only binary phenotypic associations between drugs and diseases; the types of drug and diseases have not been well exploited. Principally, the clinical phenotypes of a known drug can be divided into indications (Is), side effects (SEs), and contraindications (CIs). Incorporating these different clinical phenotypes of drug–disease associations (DDAs) can improve the prediction accuracy of the DDAs. Methods: We develop Drug Disease Interaction Type (DDIT), a user-friendly online predictor that supports drug repositioning by submitting known Is, SEs, and CIs for a target drug of interest. The dataset for Is, SEs, and CIs was extracted from PREDICT, SIDER, and MED-RT, respectively. To unify the names of the drugs and diseases, we mapped their names to the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) ontology using Rest API. We then integrated multiple clinical phenotypes into a conditional restricted Boltzmann machine (RBM) enabling the identification of different phenotypes of drug–disease associations, including the prediction of as yet unknown DDAs in the input. Results: By 10-fold cross-validation, we demonstrate that DDIT can effectively capture the latent features of the drug–disease association network and represents over 0.217 and over 0.072 improvement in AUC and AUPR, respectively, for predicting the clinical phenotypes of DDAs compared with the classic K-nearest neighbors method (KNN, including drug-based KNN and disease-based KNN), Random Forest, and XGBoost. By conducting leave-one-drug-class-out cross-validation, the AUC and AUPR of DDIT demonstrated an improvement of 0.135 in AUC and 0.075 in AUPR compared to any of the other four methods. Within the top 10 predicted indications, side effects, and contraindications, 7/10, 9/10, and 9/10 hit known drug–disease associations. Overall, DDIT is a useful tool for predicting multiple clinical phenotypic types of drug–disease associations. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8809407/ /pubmed/35126114 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.772026 Text en Copyright © 2022 Lu, Qin, Chen, Wu, Zhao, Miyano, Zhang, Yu and Li. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Lu, Lu
Qin, Jiale
Chen, Jiandong
Wu, Hao
Zhao, Qiang
Miyano, Satoru
Zhang, Yaozhong
Yu, Hua
Li, Chen
DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title_full DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title_fullStr DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title_full_unstemmed DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title_short DDIT: An Online Predictor for Multiple Clinical Phenotypic Drug-Disease Associations
title_sort ddit: an online predictor for multiple clinical phenotypic drug-disease associations
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8809407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126114
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.772026
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