Predicting drug-microbiome interactions with machine learning

Biotechnol Adv. 2022 Jan-Feb:54:107797. doi: 10.1016/j.biotechadv.2021.107797. Epub 2021 Jul 11.

Abstract

Pivotal work in recent years has cast light on the importance of the human microbiome in maintenance of health and physiological response to drugs. It is now clear that gastrointestinal microbiota have the metabolic power to promote, inactivate, or even toxify the efficacy of a drug to a level of clinically relevant significance. At the same time, it appears that drug intake has the propensity to alter gut microbiome composition, potentially affecting health and response to other drugs. Since the precise composition of an individual's microbiome is unique, one's drug-microbiome relationship is similarly unique. Thus, in the age of evermore personalised medicine, the ability to predict individuals' drug-microbiome interactions is highly sought. Machine learning (ML) offers a powerful toolkit capable of characterising and predicting drug-microbiota interactions at the individual patient level. ML techniques have the potential to learn the mechanisms operating drug-microbiome activities and measure patients' risk of such occurrences. This review will outline current knowledge at the drug-microbiota interface, and present ML as a technique for examining and forecasting personalised drug-microbiome interactions. When harnessed effectively, ML could alter how the pharmaceutical industry and healthcare professionals consider the drug-microbiome axis in patient care.

Keywords: Artificial intelligence; Bacteria; Big data; Biopharmaceutics; Drug discovery and development; Information technology; Metabolism of pharmaceuticals and medicines; Microorganisms; Pharmacokinetics; Repurposing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Machine Learning
  • Microbiota*