An herbal drug combination identified by knowledge graph alleviates the clinical symptoms of plasma cell mastitis patients: A nonrandomized controlled trial

Elife. 2023 Mar 14:12:e84414. doi: 10.7554/eLife.84414.

Abstract

Background: Plasma cell mastitis (PCM) is a nonbacterial breast inflammation with severe and intense clinical manifestation, yet treatment methods for PCM are still rather limited. Although the mechanism of PCM remains unclear, mounting evidence suggests that the dysregulation of immune system is closely associated with the pathogenesis of PCM. Drug combinations or combination therapy could exert improved efficacy and reduced toxicity by hitting multiple discrete cellular targets.

Methods: We have developed a knowledge graph architecture toward immunotherapy and systematic immunity that consists of herbal drug-target interactions with a novel scoring system to select drug combinations based on target-hitting rates and phenotype relativeness. To this end, we employed this knowledge graph to identify an herbal drug combination for PCM and we subsequently evaluated the efficacy of the herbal drug combination in clinical trial.

Results: Our clinical data suggests that the herbal drug combination could significantly reduce the serum level of various inflammatory cytokines, downregulate serum IgA and IgG level, reduce the recurrence rate, and reverse the clinical symptoms of PCM patients with improvements in general health status.

Conclusions: In summary, we reported that an herbal drug combination identified by knowledge graph can alleviate the clinical symptoms of PCM patients. We demonstrated that the herbal drug combination holds great promise as an effective remedy for PCM, acting through the regulation of immunoinflammatory pathways and improvement of systematic immune level. In particular, the herbal drug combination could significantly reduce the recurrence rate of PCM, a major obstacle to PCM treatment. Our data suggests that the herbal drug combination is expected to feature prominently in future PCM treatment.

Funding: C. Liu's lab was supported by grants from the Public Health Science and Technology Project of Shenyang (grant: 22-321-32-18); Y. Yang's laboratory was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant: 81874301), the Fundamental Research Funds for Central University (grant: DUT22YG122), and the Key Research project of 'be Recruited and be in Command' in Liaoning Province (2021JH1/10400050).

Clinical trial number: NCT05530226.

Keywords: clinical trial; drug combination; human; knowledge graph; medicine; plasma cell mastitis; traditional chinese medicine.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial
  • Controlled Clinical Trial
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cytokines / metabolism
  • Drug Combinations
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Mastitis* / drug therapy
  • Mastitis* / metabolism
  • Mastitis* / pathology
  • Pattern Recognition, Automated
  • Plasma Cells*

Substances

  • Cytokines
  • Drug Combinations

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT05530226

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.