4.7 Article

Network-Based Assessment of Adverse Drug Reaction Risk in Polypharmacy Using High-Throughput Screening Data

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20020386

Keywords

network pharmacology; adverse drug reaction; polypharmacology; polypharmacy; risk prediction; Library of Integrated Network-Based Cellular Signatures; LINCS; L1000 assay

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institute of Health [NIH R24 DK082841]
  2. University of North Dakota Post-Doctoral Pilot Grant [UND0021230]

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The risk of adverse drug reactions increases in a polypharmacology setting. High-throughput drug screening with transcriptomics applied to human cells has shown that drugs have effects on several molecular pathways, and these affected pathways may be predictive proxy for adverse drug reactions. Depending on the way that different drugs may contribute to adverse drug reactions, different options may exist in the clinical setting. Here, we formulate a network framework to integrate the relationships between drugs, biological functions, and adverse drug reactions based on the high-throughput drug perturbation data from the Library of Integrated Network-Based Cellular Signatures (LINCS) project. We present network-based parameters that indicate whether a given reaction may be related to the effect of a single drug or to the combination of several drugs, as well as the relative risk of adverse drug reaction manifestation given a certain drug combination.

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