A systems pharmacology approach was undertaken to define and identify the proteins/genes significantly associated with clinical incidence and severity of drug-induced peripheral neuropathy (DIPN). Pharmacological networks of 234 DIPN drugs, their known targets (both intended and unintended), and the intermediator proteins/genes interacting with these drugs via their known targets were examined. A permutation test identified 230 DIPN-associated intermediators that were enriched with apoptosis and stress response genes. Neuropathy incidence and severity were curated from drug labels and literature, and were used to build a predictive model of DIPN using a regression tree algorithm, based on the drug targets and their intermediators. DIPN drugs whose targets interacted with both v-myc avian myelocytomatosis viral oncogene homolog (MYC) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen-associated factor (PAF15) were associated with a neuropathy incidence of 38.1%, whereas drugs interacting only with MYC had an incidence of 2.9%. These results warrant further investigation in order to develop a predictive tool for the DIPN potential of a new drug. © 2014 ASCPT All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Hur, J., Guo, A. Y., Loh, W. Y., Feldman, E. L., & Bai, J. P. F. (2014). Integrated systems pharmacology analysis of clinical drug-induced peripheral neuropathy. CPT: Pharmacometrics and Systems Pharmacology, 3(5). https://doi.org/10.1038/psp.2014.11
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