Incorporating uncertainty quantification into the in silico qNet metric improved the accuracy of Torsade de Pointes risk stratification for 12 training compounds at 1x Cmax compared to fixed-input models.
Drug-induced Torsade de Pointes (TdP) risk (n=12)
Uncertainty quantification (UQ) in silico TdP risk metric (qNet) vs Fixed-input simulations (without UQ) (1x to 25x Cmax)
Mean prediction error for TdP risk stratification at 1x Cmax using leave-one-out cross validation
Absolute Event Rate: 0.09% vs 0.17%
The Comprehensive in vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CiPA) is a global initiative intended to improve drug proarrhythmia risk assessment using a new paradigm of mechanistic assays. Under the CiPA paradigm, the relative risk of drug-induced Torsade de Pointes (TdP) is assessed using an in silico model of the human ventricular action potential (AP) that integrates in vitro pharmacology data from multiple ion channels. Thus modeling predictions of cardiac risk liability will depend critically on the variability in pharmacology data, and uncertainty quantification (UQ) must comprise an essential component of the in silico assay. This study explores UQ methods that may be incorporated into the CiPA framework. Recently, we proposed a promising in silico TdP risk metric (qNet), which is derived from AP simulations and allows separation of a set of CiPA training compounds into Low, Intermediate, and High TdP risk categories. The purpose of this study was to use UQ to evaluate the robustness of TdP risk separation by qNet. Uncertainty in the model parameters used to describe drug binding and ionic current block was estimated using the nonparametric bootstrap method and a Bayesian inference approach. Uncertainty was then propagated through AP simulations to quantify uncertainty in qNet for each drug. UQ revealed lower uncertainty and more accurate TdP risk stratification by qNet when simulations were run at concentrations below 5× the maximum therapeutic exposure (Cmax). However, when drug effects were extrapolated above 10× Cmax, UQ showed that qNet could no longer clearly separate drugs by TdP risk. This was because for most of the pharmacology data, the amount of current block measured was <60%, preventing reliable estimation of IC50 values. The results of this study demonstrate that the accuracy of TdP risk prediction depends both on the intrinsic variability in ion channel pharmacology data as well as on experimental design considerations that preclude an accurate determination of drug IC50 values in vitro. Thus, we demonstrate that UQ provides valuable information about in silico modeling predictions that can inform future proarrhythmic risk evaluation of drugs under the CiPA paradigm.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Kelly C. Chang
United States Food and Drug Administration
Sara Dutta
University of Oxford
Gary R. Mirams
University of Nottingham
Frontiers in Physiology
University of Nottingham
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
Seabrook
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Chang et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Drug-induced Torsade de Pointes (TdP) risk (n=12). Uncertainty quantification (UQ) in silico TdP risk metric (qNet) vs. Fixed-input simulations (without UQ) was evaluated on Mean prediction error for TdP risk stratification at 1x Cmax using leave-one-out cross validation. Incorporating uncertainty quantification into the in silico qNet metric improved the accuracy of Torsade de Pointes risk stratification for 12 training compounds at 1x Cmax compared to fixed-input models.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11fec0c031bb6829a5b621 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2017.00917