Using human in vitro transcriptome analysis to build trustworthy machine learning models for prediction of animal drug toxicity.

Journal: Scientific reports
Published Date:

Abstract

During the development of new drugs or compounds there is a requirement for preclinical trials, commonly involving animal tests, to ascertain the safety of the compound prior to human trials. Machine learning techniques could provide an in-silico alternative to animal models for assessing drug toxicity, thus reducing expensive and invasive animal testing during clinical trials, for drugs that are most likely to fail safety tests. Here we present a machine learning model to predict kidney dysfunction, as a proxy for drug induced renal toxicity, in rats. To achieve this, we use inexpensive transcriptomic profiles derived from human cell lines after chemical compound treatment to train our models combined with compound chemical structure information. Genomics data due to its sparse, high-dimensional and noisy nature presents significant challenges in building trustworthy and transparent machine learning models. Here we address these issues by judiciously building feature sets from heterogenous sources and coupling them with measures of model uncertainty achieved through Gaussian Process based Bayesian models. We combine the use of insight into the feature-wise contributions to our predictions with the use of predictive uncertainties recovered from the Gaussian Process to improve the transparency and trustworthiness of the model.

Authors

  • Laura-Jayne Gardiner
    IBM Research UK, Sci-Tech Daresbury, Warrington, UK. Laura-Jayne.Gardiner@ibm.com.
  • Anna Paola Carrieri
    IBM Research UK, Sci-Tech Daresbury, Warrington, UK.
  • Jenny Wilshaw
    IBM Research UK, Sci-Tech Daresbury, Warrington, UK.
  • Stephen Checkley
    STFC Daresbury Lab., Warrington, UK.
  • Edward O Pyzer-Knapp
    IBM Research U.K. , Hartree Centre, Daresbury WA4 4AD , United Kingdom.
  • Ritesh Krishna
    IBM Research UK, Sci-Tech Daresbury, Warrington, UK. Ritesh.krishna@uk.ibm.com.