DrugMetab: An Integrated Machine Learning and Lexicon Mapping Named Entity Recognition Method for Drug Metabolite.

Journal: CPT: pharmacometrics & systems pharmacology
Published Date:

Abstract

Drug metabolites (DMs) are critical in pharmacology research areas, such as drug metabolism pathways and drug-drug interactions. However, there is no terminology dictionary containing comprehensive drug metabolite names, and there is no named entity recognition (NER) algorithm focusing on drug metabolite identification. In this article, we developed a novel NER system, DrugMetab, to identify DMs from the PubMed abstracts. DrugMetab utilizes the features characterized from the Part-of-Speech, drug index, and pre/suffix, and determines DMs within context. To evaluate the performance, a gold-standard corpus was manually constructed. In this task, DrugMetab with sequential minimal optimization (SMO) classifier achieves 0.89 precision, 0.77 recall, and 0.83 F-measure in the internal testing set; and 0.86 precision, 0.85 recall, and 0.86 F-measure in the external validation set. We further compared the performance between DrugMetab and whatizitChemical, which was designed for identifying small molecules or chemical entities. DrugMetab outperformed whatizitChemical, which had a lower recall rate of 0.65.

Authors

  • Heng-Yi Wu
    School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN USA.
  • Deshun Lu
    Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
  • Mustafa Hyder
    Division of Clinical Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
  • Shijun Zhang
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
  • Sara K Quinney
    Division of Clinical Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
  • Zeruesenay Desta
    Division of Clinical Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
  • Lang Li
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.