AI Article Synopsis

  • Drug-induced cardiotoxicity is a major reason why drug candidates fail during development, making its evaluation critical in drug testing and regulatory review.
  • The study analyzed FDA postmarket adverse events for 2002 drugs, categorizing cardiac toxicity-related terms into 12 relevant groups to create training sets for model development.
  • Researchers used two commercial QSAR platforms to develop 12 predictive models, achieving up to 80% sensitivity and negative predictivity, which can improve the screening of potential cardiotoxic drugs in the development process.

Article Abstract

Drug-induced cardiotoxicity represents one of the most common causes of attrition of drug candidates in preclinical and clinical development. For this reason, the evaluation of cardiac toxicity is essential during drug development and regulatory review. In the present study, drug-induced postmarket adverse event combinations from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System were extracted for 2002 drugs using 243 cardiac toxicity-related preferred terms (PTs). These PTs were combined into 12 groups based on their clinical relevance to serve as training sets. The optimal classification scheme was determined using a combination of data sources that included drug labeling information, published literature, clinical study data, and postmarket surveillance data. Two commercial QSAR platforms were used to construct 12 models, including general cardiac toxicity, cardiac ischemia, heart failure, cardiac valve disease, myocardial disease, pericardial disease, structural heart disease, cardiac arrhythmia, Torsades de Pointes, long QT syndrome, atrial fibrillation and ventricular arrhythmia, and cardiac arrest. The cross-validated performance for the new models reached a sensitivity of up to 80% and negative predictivity of up to 80%. These new models covering a wide range of cardiac endpoints will provide fast, reliable, and comprehensive predictions of potential cardiotoxic compounds in drug discovery and regulatory safety assessment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11653395PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrestox.4c00186DOI Listing

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