InContext: curation of medical context for drug indications.

Data quality Drug indications Drug repurposing Ontologies Semantic similarity

Journal

Journal of biomedical semantics
ISSN: 2041-1480
Titre abrégé: J Biomed Semantics
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101531992

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
12 02 2021
Historique:
received: 05 07 2018
accepted: 21 01 2021
entrez: 13 2 2021
pubmed: 14 2 2021
medline: 29 10 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Accurate and precise information about the therapeutic uses (indications) of a drug is essential for applications in drug repurposing and precision medicine. Leading online drug resources such as DrugCentral and DrugBank provide rich information about various properties of drugs, including their indications. However, because indications in such databases are often partly automatically mined, some may prove to be inaccurate or imprecise. Particularly challenging for text mining methods is the task of distinguishing between general disease mentions in drug product labels and actual indications for the drug. For this, the qualifying medical context of the disease mentions in the text should be studied. Some examples include contraindications, co-prescribed drugs and target patient qualifications. No existing indication curation efforts attempt to capture such information in a precise way. Here we fill this gap by presenting a novel curation protocol for extracting indications and machine processable annotations of contextual information about the therapeutic use of a drug. We implemented the protocol on a reference set of FDA-approved drug product labels on the DailyMed website to curate indications for 150 anti-cancer and cardiovascular drugs. The resulting corpus - InContext - focuses on anti-cancer and cardiovascular drugs because of the heightened societal interest in cancer and heart disease. In order to understand how InContext relates with existing reputable drug indication databases, we analysed it's overlap with a state-of-the-art indications database - LabeledIn - as well as a reputable online drug compendium - DrugCentral. We found that 40% of indications sampled from DrugCentral (and 23% from LabeledIn) respectively, could not be accounted for in InContext. This raises questions about the veracity of indications not appearing in InContext. The additional contextual information curated by InContext about disease mentions in drug SPLs provides a foundation for more precise, structured and formal representations of knowledge related to drug therapeutic use, in order to increase accuracy and agreement of drug indication extraction methods for in silico drug repurposing.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33579375
doi: 10.1186/s13326-021-00234-4
pii: 10.1186/s13326-021-00234-4
pmc: PMC7881657
doi:

Substances chimiques

Pharmaceutical Preparations 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

2

Subventions

Organisme : NCATS NIH HHS
ID : OT3 TR002027
Pays : United States
Organisme : NCI NIH HHS
ID : U24 CA224370
Pays : United States
Organisme : NCI NIH HHS
ID : P30 CA118100
Pays : United States

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Auteurs

Kody Moodley (K)

Institute of Data Science, Maastricht University, Paul-Henri Spaaklaan 1, 6229 GT, Maastricht, The Netherlands. kody.moodley@maastrichtuniversity.nl.

Linda Rieswijk (L)

Institute of Data Science, Maastricht University, Paul-Henri Spaaklaan 1, 6229 GT, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Tudor I Oprea (TI)

Translational Informatics Division, Department of Internal Medicine, MSC09-5025, One University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87131, USA.
UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1201 Camino de Salud, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87102, USA.

Michel Dumontier (M)

Institute of Data Science, Maastricht University, Paul-Henri Spaaklaan 1, 6229 GT, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

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Classifications MeSH