Sex-Specific Classification of Drug-Induced Torsade de Pointes Susceptibility Using Cardiac Simulations and Machine Learning.

Journal: Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics
PMID:

Abstract

Torsade de Pointes (TdP), a rare but lethal ventricular arrhythmia, is a toxic side effect of many drugs. To assess TdP risk, safety regulatory guidelines require quantification of hERG channel block in vitro and QT interval prolongation in vivo for all new therapeutic compounds. Unfortunately, these have proven to be poor predictors of torsadogenic risk, and are likely to have prevented safe compounds from reaching clinical phases. Although this has stimulated numerous efforts to define new paradigms for cardiac safety, none of the recently developed strategies accounts for patient conditions. In particular, despite being a well-established independent risk factor for TdP, female sex is vastly under-represented in both basic research and clinical studies, and thus current TdP metrics are likely biased toward the male sex. Here, we apply statistical learning to synthetic data, generated by simulating drug effects on cardiac myocyte models capturing male and female electrophysiology, to develop new sex-specific classification frameworks for TdP risk. We show that (i) TdP classifiers require different features in females vs. males; (ii) male-based classifiers perform more poorly when applied to female data; and (iii) female-based classifier performance is largely unaffected by acute effects of hormones (i.e., during various phases of the menstrual cycle). Notably, when predicting TdP risk of intermediate drugs on female simulated data, male-biased predictive models consistently underestimate TdP risk in women. Therefore, we conclude that pipelines for preclinical cardiotoxicity risk assessment should consider sex as a key variable to avoid potentially life-threatening consequences for the female population.

Authors

  • Alex Fogli Iseppe
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Haibo Ni
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Sicheng Zhu
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Xianwei Zhang
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Raffaele Coppini
    Department of Neuroscience, Psychology, Drug Sciences and Child Health (NeuroFarBa), University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
  • Pei-Chi Yang
    Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Uma Srivatsa
    Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Colleen E Clancy
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Andrew G Edwards
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Stefano Morotti
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
  • Eleonora Grandi
    Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.