Abstract

Computerized methods for drug-related side effect identification can help reduce costs and speed up drug development. Multisource data about drug and side effects are widely used to predict potential drug-related side effects. Heterogeneous graphs are commonly used to associate multisourced data of drugs and side effects which can reflect similarities of the drugs from different perspectives. Effective integration and formulation of diverse similarities, however, are challenging. In addition, the specific topology of each heterogeneous graph and the common topology of multiple graphs are neglected. We propose a drug-side effect association prediction model, GCRS, to encode and integrate specific topologies, common topologies and pairwise attributes of drugs and side effects. First, multiple drug-side effect heterogeneous graphs are constructed using various kinds of similarities and associations related to drugs and side effects. As each heterogeneous graph has its specific topology, we establish separate module based on graph convolutional autoencoder (GCA) to learn the particular topology representation of each drug node and each side effect node, respectively. Since multiple graphs reflect the complex relationships among the drug and side effect nodes and contain common topologies, we construct a module based on GCA with sharing parameters to learn the common topology representations of each node. Afterwards, we design an attention mechanism to obtain more informative topology representations at the representation level. Finally, multi-layer convolutional neural networks with attribute-level attention are constructed to deeply integrate the similarity and association attributes of a pair of drug-side effect nodes. Comprehensive experiments show that GCRS's prediction performance is superior to other comparing state-of-the-art methods for predicting drug-side effect associations. The recall rates in top-ranked candidates and case studies on five drugs further demonstrate GCRS's ability in discovering potential drug-related side effects. zhang@hlju.edu.cn.

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