JOURNAL ARTICLE

Systematic Drug Repositioning Based on Clinical Side-Effects

Lun YangPankaj Agarwal

Year: 2011 Journal:   PLoS ONE Vol: 6 (12)Pages: e28025-e28025   Publisher: Public Library of Science

Abstract

Drug repositioning helps fully explore indications for marketed drugs and clinical candidates. Here we show that the clinical side-effects (SEs) provide a human phenotypic profile for the drug, and this profile can suggest additional disease indications. We extracted 3,175 SE-disease relationships by combining the SE-drug relationships from drug labels and the drug-disease relationships from PharmGKB. Many relationships provide explicit repositioning hypotheses, such as drugs causing hypoglycemia are potential candidates for diabetes. We built Naïve Bayes models to predict indications for 145 diseases using the SEs as features. The AUC was above 0.8 in 92% of these models. The method was extended to predict indications for clinical compounds, 36% of the models achieved AUC above 0.7. This suggests that closer attention should be paid to the SEs observed in trials not just to evaluate the harmful effects, but also to rationally explore the repositioning potential based on this "clinical phenotypic assay".

Keywords:
Drug repositioning Drug Disease Medicine Clinical trial Bayes' theorem Side effect (computer science) Pharmacology Bioinformatics Computational biology Internal medicine Biology Computer science Artificial intelligence Bayesian probability

Metrics

270
Cited By
13.73
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
60
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Computational Drug Discovery Methods
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computational Theory and Mathematics
Biomedical Text Mining and Ontologies
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Pharmacogenetics and Drug Metabolism
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmacology
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.