Abstract

Quantitative structure activity relationship (QSAR) modeling has been in use for several decades now. One branch of it, in silico ADMET, became more and more important since the late 1990s as studies indicated that poor pharmacokinetics and toxicity were important causes of costly late-stage failures in drug development. In this paper we describe some of the available methods and best practice for the different stages of the in silico model building process. We also describe some more recent developments, like automated model building and the prediction probability. Finally we will discuss the use of in silico ADMET for "big data" and the importance and possible further development of interpretable models.

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