Abstract

The Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system, recommended by the World Health Organization, categories drugs into different classes according to their therapeutic and chemical characteristics. For a set of query compounds, how can we identify which ATC-class (or classes) they belong to? It is an important and challenging problem because the information thus obtained would be quite useful for drug development and utilization. By hybridizing the informations of chemical-chemical interactions and chemical-chemical similarities, a novel method was developed for such purpose. It was observed by the jackknife test on a benchmark dataset of 3,883 drug compounds that the overall success rate achieved by the prediction method was about 73% in identifying the drugs among the following 14 main ATC-classes: (1) alimentary tract and metabolism; (2) blood and blood forming organs; (3) cardiovascular system; (4) dermatologicals; (5) genitourinary system and sex hormones; (6) systemic hormonal preparations, excluding sex hormones and insulins; (7) anti-infectives for systemic use; (8) antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents; (9) musculoskeletal system; (10) nervous system; (11) antiparasitic products, insecticides and repellents; (12) respiratory system; (13) sensory organs; (14) various. Such a success rate is substantially higher than 7% by the random guess. It has not escaped our notice that the current method can be straightforwardly extended to identify the drugs for their 2nd-level, 3rd-level, 4th-level, and 5th-level ATC-classifications once the statistically significant benchmark data are available for these lower levels.

Highlights

  • Nowadays, the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system, recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), is the most widely recognized classification system for drugs

  • The ATC classification is very helpful for studying utilization of drugs and categorizing them according to different purposes, therapeutic properties, chemical and pharmacological properties

  • In the ATC classification system, drugs are classified into 14 main classes

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Summary

Introduction

The Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system, recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), is the most widely recognized classification system for drugs. Prediction Based on Chemical-Chemical Similarities Likewise, based on the fact that the compounds with similar physicochemical properties often have the same biological activities [1], we can use the information of chemicalchemical similarities as another feasible avenue to predict the ATC-class for a query drug.

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