ANI
31 Jan 2023, 06:03 GMT+10
Pennsylvania [US], January 31 (ANI): Researchers from Penn State College of Medicine and the University of Minnesota conducted a study to see if drugs like dextromethorphan, which is used to treat cold and flu-related coughs, may be repurposed to help individuals give up smoking. In order to find the medications, they created a revolutionary machine-learning technique that uses computer programs to look for patterns and trends in data sets. They claimed that some of the drugs are already being evaluated in clinical trials.
Smoking causes close to 500,000 deaths annually in the United States and is a risk factor for respiratory illnesses, cancer, and cardiovascular disease. While smoking habits can be acquired and unlearned, heredity also affects a person's likelihood of doing so. The researchers found in a prior study that people with certain genes are more likely to become addicted to tobacco.
Using genetic data from more than 1.3 million people, Dajiang Liu, Ph.D., professor of public health sciences, and of biochemistry and molecular biology, and Bibo Jiang, Ph.D., assistant professor of public health sciences, co-led a large multi-institution study that used machine learning to study these large data sets -- which include specific data about a person's genetics and their self-reported smoking behaviors.
The researchers identified more than 400 genes that were related to smoking behaviors. Since a person can have thousands of genes, they had to determine why some of those genes were connected to smoking behaviors. Genes that carry instructions for the production of nicotine receptors or are involved in signaling for the hormone dopamine, which makes people feel relaxed and happy, had easy-to-understand connections. For the remaining genes, the research team had to determine the role each plays in biological pathways and using that information, figured out what medications are already approved for modifying those existing pathways.
Most of the genetic data in the study is from people with European ancestry, so the machine learning model had to be tailored to not only study that data, but also a smaller data set of around 150,000 people with Asian, African or American ancestry.
Liu and Jiang worked with more than 70 scientists on the project. They identified at least eight medications that could potentially be repurposed for smoking cessation, such as dextromethorphan, which is commonly used to treat coughs caused by cold and flu, and galantamine, which is used to treat Alzheimer's disease. The study was published in Nature Genetics today, January 26.
"Re-purposing drugs using big biomedical data and machine learning methods can save money, time, and resources," said Liu, a Penn State Cancer Institute and Penn State Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences researcher, adding, "Some of the drugs we identified are already being tested in clinical trials for their ability to help smokers quit, but there are still other possible candidates that could be explored in future research."While the machine learning method was able to incorporate a small set of data from diverse ancestries, Jiang said it's still important for researchers to build out genetic databases from individuals with diverse ancestries.
"This will only improve the accuracy with which machine learning models can identify individuals at risk for drug misuse and determine potential biological pathways that can be targeted for helpful treatments," said Liu. (ANI)
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