Machine Learning Predicts Drug Metabolism and Bioaccumulation by Intestinal Microbiota

Pharmaceutics. 2021 Nov 25;13(12):2001. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13122001.

Abstract

Over 150 drugs are currently recognised as being susceptible to metabolism or bioaccumulation (together described as depletion) by gastrointestinal microorganisms; however, the true number is likely higher. Microbial drug depletion is often variable between and within individuals, depending on their unique composition of gut microbiota. Such variability can lead to significant differences in pharmacokinetics, which may be associated with dosing difficulties and lack of medication response. In this study, literature mining and unsupervised learning were used to curate a dataset of 455 drug-microbiota interactions. From this, 11 supervised learning models were developed that could predict drugs' susceptibility to depletion by gut microbiota. The best model, a tuned extremely randomised trees classifier, achieved performance metrics of AUROC: 75.1% ± 6.8; weighted recall: 79.2% ± 3.9; balanced accuracy: 69.0% ± 4.6; and weighted precision: 80.2% ± 3.7 when validated on 91 drugs. This machine learning model is the first of its kind and provides a rapid, reliable, and resource-friendly tool for researchers and industry professionals to screen drugs for susceptibility to depletion by gut microbiota. The recognition of drug-microbiome interactions can support successful drug development and promote better formulations and dosage regimens for patients.

Keywords: artificial intelligence; classification; drug discovery and development; drug stability; feature selection; gastrointestinal microbiome; in silico prediction; pharmacokinetics; principal component analysis; semi-supervised learning.