Artificial intelligence-based molecular property prediction of photosensitising effects of drugs

  • Amun G. Hofmann (Lead / Corresponding author)
  • , Benedikt Weber
  • , Sally Ibbotson
  • , Asan Agibetov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
8 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Drug-induced photosensitivity is a potential adverse event of many drugs and chemicals used across a wide range of specialties in clinical medicine. In the present study, we investigated the feasibility of predicting the photosensitising effects of drugs and chemical compounds via state-of-the-art artificial intelligence-based workflows. A dataset of 2200 drugs was used to train three distinct models (logistic regression, XGBoost and a deep learning model (Chemprop)) to predict photosensitising attributes. Labels were obtained from a list of previously published photosensitisers by string matching and manual validation. External evaluation of the different models was performed using the tox21 dataset. ROC-AUC ranged between 0.8939 (Chemprop) and 0.9525 (XGBoost) during training, while in the test partition it ranged between 0.7785 (Chemprop) and 0.7927 (XGBoost). Analysis of the top 200 compounds of each model resulted in 55 overlapping molecules in the external validation set. Prediction scores in fluoroquinolones within this subset corresponded well with culprit substructures such as fluorinated aryl halides suspected of mediating photosensitising effects. All three models appeared capable of predicting photosensitising effects of chemical compounds. However, compared to the simpler model, the complex models appeared to be more confident in their predictions as exhibited by their distribution of prediction scores.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)556-561
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Drug Targeting
Volume33
Issue number4
Early online date2 Dec 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • adverse reaction
  • artificial intelligence
  • deep learning
  • Machine learning
  • photosensitivity
  • phototoxicity

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pharmaceutical Science

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