A Topic-modeling Based Framework for Drug-drug Interaction Classification from Biomedical Text.

Journal: AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings. AMIA Symposium
Published Date:

Abstract

Classification of drug-drug interaction (DDI) from medical literatures is significant in preventing medication-related errors. Most of the existing machine learning approaches are based on supervised learning methods. However, the dynamic nature of drug knowledge, combined with the enormity and rapidly growing of the biomedical literatures make supervised DDI classification methods easily overfit the corpora and may not meet the needs of real-world applications. In this paper, we proposed a relation classification framework based on topic modeling (RelTM) augmented with distant supervision for the task of DDI from biomedical text. The uniqueness of RelTM lies in its two-level sampling from both DDI and drug entities. Through this design, RelTM take both relation features and drug mention features into considerations. An efficient inference algorithm for the model using Gibbs sampling is also proposed. Compared to the previous supervised models, our approach does not require human efforts such as annotation and labeling, which is its advantage in trending big data applications. Meanwhile, the distant supervision combination allows RelTM to incorporate rich existing knowledge resources provided by domain experts. The experimental results on the 2013 DDI challenge corpus reach 48% in F1 score, showing the effectiveness of RelTM.

Authors

  • Dingcheng Li
    These authors contributed equally to this study and Dr. Li is now working at IBM; Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
  • Sijia Liu
    These authors contributed equally to this study and Dr. Li is now working at IBM; Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA; Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
  • Majid Rastegar-Mojarad
    Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
  • Yanshan Wang
    Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
  • Vipin Chaudhary
    Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
  • Terry Therneau
    Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
  • Hongfang Liu
    Department of Artificial Intelligence & Informatics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States.