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Medinfo 2013 Copenhagen, Denmark Session: Data models and representations - II August 21, 2013 Exploring pharmacoepidemiologic groupings of drugs from a clinical perspective Rainer Winnenburg, Olivier Bodenreider Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications Bethesda, Maryland - USA Motivation Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification Used in pharmacoepidemiologic studies Recently also used in applications from a clinical perspective Assumes homogeneity of drug groups (in terms of therapeutic use, mechanism of action, physiologic effect) BUT: “Substances classified in the same ATC fourth level cannot be considered pharmacotherapeutically equivalent since their mode of action, therapeutic effect, drug interactions and adverse drug reaction profile may differ.” (ATC documentation) Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 2 Objectives To investigate the extent to which pharmacoepidemiologic groupings are homogeneous in terms of clinical properties Pharmacoepidemiologic groupings Clinical properties ATC classification WHO For comparison: Micromedex National Drug File-Reference Terminology (NDF-RT) Homogeneity Distribution of clinical properties of drugs within a grouping Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 3 Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) drug classification Hierarchical Levels 1-4: drug groups (~ pharmacologic classes) classification 1,255 drug group codes Level 5: individual drugs 4,464 drug codes (as of 2012) Code C C01 C01A C01AA C01AA05 Label Cardiovascular system Cardiac therapy Cardiac glycosides Digitalis glycosides Digoxin Level 1 - anatomical 2 - therapeutic 3 - pharmacological 4 - pharmaceutic 5 - drug Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 4 National Drug File-Reference Terminology (NDF-RT) Organized 7,162 active moieties (level = ingredient) Relations to entities from other hierarchies We into several hierarchies e.g., has_MoA relationships to mechanism of action hierarchy used NDF-RT API for Mapping drug names from ATC to NDF-RT Querying drug properties Drug atorvastatin atorvastatin atorvastatin atorvastatin Property has_MoA has_PE may_treat may_prevent Value Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors Decreased Cholesterol Synthesis Hypercholesterolemia Coronary Artery Disease Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 5 Methods Overview Mapping ATC drugs to ingredients in NDF-RT and acquiring clinical properties for ingredients 2. Computing homogeneity scores for each drug class based on properties of drugs in class 3. Comparison to the clinical reference Micromedex 1. Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 6 Step 1 Mapping ATC drugs to clinical properties ATC Drugs 5th level Eligibility ATC Drugs (single ingredients within scope) Exclude: Prednisolone (R01AD02) • Multi-ingredient drugs Prednisolone (R01AD02) • Radiopharmaceuticals • Unspecific, collective terms Lexical mapping and via RxNorm Clinical Properties (any of the 3 categories) has_MoA 5-Lipoxygenase Inhibitors has_MoA Glucocorticoid Receptor Agonists has_MoA Lipoxygenase Inhibitors Relationships may_treat has_MoA has_PE NDF-RT Ingredients PREDNISOLONE (N0000146334) Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 7 Step 2 Computing homogeneity scores (classes) Grouping A10BG Drugs in grouping + Clinical Properties A10BG01 troglitazone Thiazolidinediones Peroxisome Proliferatoractivated Receptor alpha Agonists Peroxisome Proliferatoractivated Receptor gamma Agonists A10BG012 rosiglitazone A10BG013 pioglitazone Insulin Receptor Agonists Insulin Receptor Agonists 3 distinct properties Homogeneity Score How many distinct properties (or sets of properties) are necessary to account for at least 90% of the drugs in a given subgroup? • 1 property accounts for 2 drugs (66% of the drugs) • 2 properties account for all 3 drugs (>90% of the drugs) => Homogeneity score = 2 Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 8 Step 2 Homogeneity scores Examples Example 1: homogeneous group ATC 4th level group Corticosteroids (R01AD) 10 drugs All 10 drugs have the same mechanism of action: Glucocorticoid Receptor Antagonists One single property accounts for 100% of the drugs in this group => homogeneity score =1 Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 9 Step 2 Homogeneity scores Examples Example 2: heterogeneous group ATC 4th level group Antidotes (V03AB) 12 drugs 8 mechanism of action properties are needed to account for > 90% of the drugs in this group Siderophore Iron Chelating Activity, Cholinesterase Inhibitors, GABA B Antagonists, Free Radical Scavenging Activity, Alcohol Dehydrogenase Inhibitors, {Noncompetitive Opioid Antagonists, Competitive Opioid Antagonists}, {Adrenergic alpha1Antagonists, Adrenergic alpha2-Antagonists}, and Cholinesterase Reactivators. => homogeneity score =8 Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 10 Step 3 Comparison to a clinical reference Clinical reference: drug groupings in Micromedex Extracted from a drug-drug interaction system homogeneity scores (“profiles”) in ATC and Micromedex 3 profiles Distribution of Therapeutic group Mechanism of action Physiologic effect Hypothesis: if ATC is less homogeneous than Micromedex, it should have greater scores Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 11 Therapeutic group profile 53% of 2nd level groups in ATC have homogeneity score of 1 or 2 vs. 75% for Micromedex ATC therapeutic (2nd level) groups less homogeneous than groups in Micromedex Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 12 Profiles for mechanism of action (MoA) and physiologic effect (PE) > 60 % of 4th level groups in ATC have homogeneity score of 1 Homogeneity of ATC groups comparable to that of groups in Micromedex Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 13 Limitations and future work Only 50% of single drugs in ATC could be mapped to NDF-RT properties Some drugs are out of scope, not marketed in the U.S. Incompleteness of NDF-RT in terms of drug properties No statistical methodology used for the comparison of homogeneity distributions We plan to explore alternative drug information sources for evaluation of ATC Only few reliable and publicly available (e.g., DrugBank) Most are commercial products (e.g., First Databank) Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 14 Summary Investigated homogeneity of pharmacoepidemiologic groupings in terms of clinical properties Mapped ATC 5th level drugs to NDF-RT properties Based on these properties we computed homogeneity scores for all ATC groups and contrasted their distribution against the Micromedex reference ATC classes are generally homogeneous in terms of clinical properties, especially mechanism of action and physiologic effect, less so for therapeutic use Incomplete drug description in NDF-RT is a major issue Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications 15 Medical Ontology Research Contact: [email protected] Web: mor.nlm.nih.gov Olivier Bodenreider Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications Bethesda, Maryland - USA