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Repurposing drugs for rare diseases, cancer and beyond

2024๋…„ 1์›” 30์ผ

์ €์ž: Ann-Marie Roche

Woman with cancer listens carefully to nurse wearing protective mask (SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images)

SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

Elsevier is applying AI and data science to reinvent and accelerate the process of drug repurposing. Our team talks about how they support R&D professionals in pharma, oncology and industry.

Itโ€™s an enticing concept: recycling old drugs for new cures. Itโ€™s also viable: aspirin, Viagra and the new weight loss drug Wegovy are all repurposed drugs. And today, thanks to innovations in AI, we are accelerating the process โ€” call it digital speed-dating that links a disease with its potential treatment.

But what does using precision medicine for crop protection have to do with it?

We talked to colleagues on Elsevierโ€™s Professional Services team to find out.ย ย 

โ€œSwiss Armyโ€ medicine

When we asked Elsevierโ€™s VP of Data Science Mark Sheehan(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) what non-AI related innovation is exciting him the most lately, his eyes lit up: โ€œNovo Nordisk(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ)โ€™s weight loss drug Wegovy(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ). Itโ€™s amazing how itโ€™s tapped into a massive new market โ€” a rarity in the Life Sciences. You have to be impressed, especially when itโ€™s answering a specific global crisis: obesity.โ€

Wegovy is also interesting because it began as a treatment for diabetes. Now itโ€™s been repurposed โ€” like aspirin, Viagra, thalidomide and countless other drugs before it. Itโ€™s also interesting because drug repurposing โ€” aka drug repositioning or reprofiling โ€” can help meet the global demand for unmet medical needs.ย 

Mark Sheehan

Mark Sheehan

By reducing timelines and costs compared to creating drugs from scratch, repurposing also taps into a deeply human emotion: the love for a bargain. Why spend millions on R&D if a solution already exists?ย 

And while repurposing enjoys a long and rich history, Elsevier is now applying AI and data science to reinvent and accelerate the process, with the Professional Services team at the forefront of this quest. In fact, the related work has expanded beyond healthcare to also take in agriculture and confronting climate change.ย 

Solving non-standard puzzlesย 

โ€œOur team covers the non-standard โ€” anything that goes beyond licensing databases like Reaxys or Embase or journal subscriptions,โ€ says Dr Frederik van den Broek(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ), Senior Director of Professional Services. โ€œThis can include integrating our data into customer systems, or customer data into our systems. We also do custom projects, which can be a write-up, a scientific analysis or even creating machine learning models for chemistry or other applications.โ€ย 

In the case of drug repurposing, the team has a wide array of digital tools to mine the scientific literature for molecular connection that can help predict the ability of a particular drug to target a particular disease.ย 

Frederik van den Broek, PhD

Frederik van den Broek, PhD

โ€œOur job is to solve puzzles. And while not being actual scientists anymore, we are still close to R&D, which in the end has the job of curing patients,โ€ says Frederik. Meanwhile much of the teamโ€™s work remains shrouded in non-disclosure agreements and the IP considerations of clients.ย 

Luckily, there is still more than enough to talk about.

Taming reams of knowledge into actionable insights

With a bachelor's degree in physics, a master's in organic chemistry and a PhD in molecular biology, Dr Anton Yuryev(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ), Consulting Director at Professional Services, is already a well-rounded individual. And heโ€™s also a well-published data scientist with a practiced sense of humor. โ€œNumbers just add up: The fact Iโ€™ve written over 50 scientific articles only means I am old,โ€ he quips.

Anton was also one of the co-founders of Ariadne Genomics, which Elsevier acquired in 2011(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) and which provided the tech backbone to current offering Biology Knowledge Graph(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ), which mines data to visualize disease biology.

Anton Yuryev, PhD

Anton Yuryev, PhD

โ€œTwenty-plus years later, I am still driven by the same passion,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s a passion we all have here in Professional Services. It comes down to Elsevier having a huge mass of data, and many different tools to access this data. And my primary job is actually to help customers navigate this maze of products, databases, interfaces, and so on โ€” taking this immense amount of data and knowledge, focusing it, and then applying it to cure patients.

โ€œLook at the case of rare diseases: the research is scattered across many different journals โ€” most of which are highly specialized and not in open access. Elsevier publishes about 25% of all the articles on rare diseases in our knowledge graph, which also contains journals from other major scientific publishers such as Wiley and Springer. As a result, we have more than 80% of all articles and data on rare diseases thatโ€™s not in open access. Now thatโ€™s a lot of data to sift through โ€” but you also know itโ€™s of the highest quality due to data extraction by Elsevier AI technology.โ€

โ€œTwenty-plus years later, I am still driven by the same passion. Itโ€™s a passion we all have here in Professional Services. It comes down to Elsevier having a huge mass of data, and many different tools to access this data. And my primary job is actually to help customers navigate this maze of products, databases, interfaces, and so on โ€” taking this immense amount of data and knowledge, focusing it, and then applying it to cure patients.โ€

Anton Yuryev, PhD

AY

Anton Yuryev, PhD

Elsevier์˜ Consulting Director for Professional Services

Secrets in innovation

Dr Maria Shkrob(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ), a biologist-turned-bio-informaticist, is a consultant at Professional Services and a former employee at Ariadne Genomics. She switched to Professional Services when she saw how much Anton was enjoying himself. โ€œIt struck me how you get to work with customers and really build something,โ€ she says. โ€œAlso, the diversity of projects is immense: you never know whatโ€™s coming next. And as Frederik says, it is really like solving a puzzle.โ€

โ€œBut it's not just a mental game. The work can potentially impact the development of new drugs and therapies. So that's exciting โ€” and hopefully useful. Of course, because of IP issues, you are never sure because our customers don't usually come back to say how they ended up using the data or whether it sparked some big decisions. But you always want to believe your work has an impact,โ€ she says and smiles.ย 

Maria Shkrob, PhD

Maria Shkrob, PhD

Drug repurposing and Elsevierย 

Thereโ€™s another reason why her work feels somewhat secretive: Elsevierโ€™s ruling reputation as a publisher. โ€œWhenever I am presenting at conferences, people are surprised I work at Elsevier โ€” they still assume Iโ€™m dealing with journals and books. Most donโ€™t know we also directly help pharma and biotech companies to design new drugs and to make them safer and better.โ€

Repurposing drugs for rare diseases is nothing new. A recent article written by Anton marked the 40th anniversary of the Orphan Drug Act(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ), which helped jumpstart an industry around repurposing. Meanwhile, Elsevierโ€™s own Year of the Zebra(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) initiative puts the spotlight on the 300+ million people worldwide with rare diseases, half of them children. Meanwhile, only 5%(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) of 8,000 known rare diseases have licensed treatments.

So thereโ€™s still a lot of work to be done.

Antonโ€™s article outlines what is needed to chase down treatments for untreatable diseases. This includes having diverse cross-functional teams, access to FAIR data(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) sources, staying on top of the latest computational research methods, and anticipating regulatory challenges โ€” while always putting patients at the center of your considerations.

The article also covers recent success stories from Elsevier in terms of uncovering drug repurposing candidates, such as with Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG), a rare childhood brain cancer. โ€œWith DIPG, we wrote a paper(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) about how we built a model of the disease aligning the genomic data of biopsies from brain tumors with the literature of this particular disease,โ€ Anton explains. โ€œBasically, we showed our algorithm could outperform a board of specialist scientists when it comes to creating a list of promising drug candidates. In fact, we could also rank this list and find more interesting candidates.โ€

And this was largely thanks to the ability to loop in personalized patient data, Anton says. ย 

Drug repurposing. Or is it personalized medicine?

The future of healthcare is clearly personalized โ€” or โ€œprecisionโ€ โ€” medicine by the simple fact that not all medicines work for all people. Take this one sobering statistic: itโ€™s estimated(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) that the 10 top-selling drugs in the United States help just one in four patients. Meanwhile, almost 20 million people worldwide are diagnosed with cancer(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) every year.

So how can you scale precision medicine for the masses? In essence, you follow the same processes as when you are trying to repurpose medicine: connecting a diseaseโ€™s actions with a personโ€™s molecular makeup and genomic profile.ย 

โ€œDrug repurposing and personalized medicine are really two sides of the same coin,โ€ says Frederik. โ€œThatโ€™s why, we are now working more directly with doctors โ€” and getting closer to the patients themselves.โ€

โ€œEvery time you analyze, for example, a cancer patientโ€™s genomic data and try to understand the particular mechanism of their cancer, you are essentially doing drug repurposing,โ€ adds Anton. โ€œYou are trying to find the best drug for their particular disease make-up. And this has really become the most exciting part of my job: Doctors are using our suggestions for patients with stage 4 cancer when there are no longer any other options. And weโ€™ve had some real success stories(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ).โ€ย 

โ€œDrug repurposing and personalized medicine are really two sides of the same coin. Thatโ€™s why, we are now working more directly with doctors โ€” and getting closer to the patients themselves.โ€

Frederik van den Broek, PhD

FVDB

Frederik van den Broek, PhD

Elsevier์˜ Senior Director of Professional Services

Wake Forest: in search of precision medicine at scale

Anton cites one particularly satisfying Elsevier collaboration with the oncology practice at Wake Forest University(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) in North Carolina. The idea was to help doctors connect individual late-stage patients with the best choice among an ever-increasing number of anti-cancer treatments.

The project involved connecting the attending doctorโ€™s own knowledge and experience, with various Elsevier digital tools to mine the relevant research โ€” while also looping in as much previously unstructured patient data as possible.ย 

The results were positive in terms of validating precision medicine. All stage 4 cancer patients treated by a drug suggested by Elsevier outlived overall standard of care survival times. But it was not yet a complete approach that can yet be scaled for daily use for millions.

โ€œThereโ€™s still a lot of work to be done,โ€ Anton says. โ€œWe need to know more about the mechanism of action of all the drugs out there. More efforts have to be made in understanding and managing all the additional unstructured data that may have an influence. But I really believe we are at a tipping point where rapid acceleration is just around the corner. Look at Every Cure.โ€

Chasing 9,000 cures

The Professional Services team is particularly excited about their work with nonprofit Every Cure(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ). โ€œThey have a very broad focus: finding a cure for as many rare diseases as possible,โ€ Frederik says.ย 

Every Cure certainly comes with a compelling back story. Co-founder Dr David Fajgenbaum(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) would most likely be dead from Castleman disease if he didnโ€™t track down a generic drug that put him in remission โ€” for 10 years and counting. Now with Every Cure, heโ€™s out to find cures for the remaining 9,000-plus incurable rare diseases by linking them with existing off-the-shelf drugs.ย 

While Elsevier is donating both data and algorithms, the project is financially supported by high-profile partners such as the Clinton Foundation(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ) and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ). โ€œAnd hereโ€™s a fun fact,โ€ says Anton: โ€œElsevier's algorithm found the same drug that the founder found more โ€˜manually.โ€™โ€

Every Cure founder David Fajgenbaum, MD, is Associate Professor of Medicine at the UPenn School of Medicine.

Every Cure founder David Fajgenbaum, MD, is Associate Professor of Medicine at the UPenn School of Medicine.

The project has once again allowed the team to work their magic across several Elsevier products. โ€œWeโ€™re working to change this, but our data is now largely in silos,โ€ Anton says. โ€œFor instance, Biology Knowledge Graph is extracted from the biomedical literature. It contains all kinds of relationships between all kinds of biological entities, such as between diseases and proteins, drugs and diseases, drugs and proteins. Meanwhile, information about drug-target affinity and drug biological effects is in Reaxys and PharmaPendium. Therefore, weโ€™re automating the workflow so we can borrow data from these knowledge sources as well.ย 

โ€œIn the end, we are able to produce a list of drug candidates along with links to the supporting research. More importantly, we are able to score them from the most hopeful to the least to help Every Cure to prioritize their work.โ€

An essential part of the process remains applying domain knowledge to evaluate if a potential target-drug can potentially work โ€” and looping these observations back into the algorithm to make it stronger. โ€œTake a compound like curcumin: This is the active compound in the Indian spice turmeric, and it gets the best score for essentially every disease,โ€ Anton explains. โ€œAnd yes, itโ€™s a remarkably promiscuous compound: it bonds with at least 50 different proteins โ€” and a lot of these are related to inflammation, which is involved in about half of all diseases. But itโ€™s just not bioavailable enough: you would maybe need to intake a kilogram orally to have an effect.โ€ย 

Going to the next level

Meanwhile, the idea of repurposing is going very much beyond healthcare. For example, his team collaborated with a company thatโ€™s working to genetically modify bacteria to capture carbon before it enters the atmosphere at steel plants. โ€œWe gathered all the information around a particular bacterium and made the company a custom knowledge graph linking all the known information,โ€ Anton says. โ€œWhile we can only hope we are setting them on the right track, they still do come across as happy customers.โ€

Based on a proof-of-concept project for a large agrochemical firm, the team was able to publish the paper: Finding novel lead compounds in pesticide discovery inspired by pharmaceutical research(์ƒˆ ํƒญ/์ฐฝ์—์„œ ์—ด๊ธฐ). โ€œLetโ€™s say you are out to target a specific fungal pest. In a way you are trying to induce an adverse drug event,โ€ Frederik explains. โ€œSo this is very much precision medicine โ€” but then as a poison. You are still trying to understand what a certain molecule does once inside the cell of an organism. And here we chose drugs that also work against the malaria parasite to see if they affected a particular fungal pest. When Maria presented our results, one of the companyโ€™s scientists showed a lot of interest โ€” but we donโ€™t know if it ended up as a new pesticide treatment. โ€œBut the approach makes sense: Why take the broad-spectrum glyphosate approach when you can go precision?โ€

Upward and onward!

The team believes their projects will only become more diverse as awareness continues to spread about Elsevierโ€™s singular offering. โ€œWeโ€™re doing more than just journals and books,โ€ says Frederik. โ€œWe have the technology to turn this knowledge into actionable insights.โ€

Maria says: โ€œWe have this ideal combination of accessible content, along with the chemistry and biology subject knowledge โ€” and the data expertise to know whatโ€™s possible.โ€

โ€œAnd these abilities fit into our larger mission,โ€ Anton adds. โ€œItโ€™s not just helping pharma with their R&D and getting their drugs to market quicker. Our most important mission is for society in general: helping patients improve their lives and longevity. Everything we do, we do for people.โ€

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