Abstract

Drug-phospholipid complexing is a promising formulation technology for improving the low bioavailability of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). However, identifying whether phospholipid and candidate drug can form a complex through in vitro tests can be costly and time-consuming due to the physicochemical properties and experimental environment. In a previous study, the authors developed seven machine learning models to predict drug-phospholipid complex formation, and the lightGBM model demonstrated the best performance. However, the previous study was unable to sufficiently address the degradation of test performance caused by the small size of the training data with class imbalance, and it had the limitation of considering only machine learning techniques. To overcome these limitations, we propose a new deep learning-based prediction model that employs variational autoencoder (VAE) and principal component analysis (PCA) techniques to improve prediction performance. The model uses a multi-layer one-dimensional convolutional neural network (CNN) with a skip connection to effectively capture the complex relationship between drugs and lipid molecules. The computer simulation results demonstrate that our proposed model performs better than the previous model in all performance metrics.

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