Abstract

Drug-disease associations provide important information for drug discovery and drug repositioning. Drug-disease associations can induce different effects, and the therapeutic effect attracts wide spread interest. Therefore, developing drug-disease association prediction methods is an important task, and differentiating therapeutic associations from other associations is also very important. In this paper, we formulate the known drug-disease associations as a bipartite network, and then present a novel representation for drugs and diseases based on the bipartite network and linear neighborhood similarity. Thus, we propose the network topological similarity-based inference method (NTSIM) to predict unobserved drug-disease associations. Further, we extend the work to the association classification, and propose the network topological similarity-based classification method (NTSIM-C) to differentiate therapeutic associations from others. Compared with existing drug-disease association prediction methods, NTSIM can produce superior performances in predicting drug-disease associations, and NTSIM-C can accurately classify drug-disease associations. Further, we analyze the capability of proposed methods by using several case studies. The studies show the usefulness of NTSIM and NTSIM-C in the real applications. In conclusion, NTSIM and NTSIM-C are promising for predicting drug-disease associations and their therapeutic functions.

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