Feedback

In silico predictions of drug-induced changes in human cardiac contractility align with experimental recordings

Affiliation
Department of Computer Science ,University of Oxford ,Oxford ,United Kingdom
Trovato, Cristian;
Affiliation
Non-Clinical Safety, Pre-Clinical Sciences ,GlaxoSmithKline ,Stevenage ,United Kingdom
Longobardi, Stefano;
Affiliation
Department of Computer Science ,University of Oxford ,Oxford ,United Kingdom
Passini, Elisa;
Affiliation
Non-Clinical Safety, Pre-Clinical Sciences ,GlaxoSmithKline ,Stevenage ,United Kingdom
Beattie, Kylie A.;
Affiliation
Department of Computer Science ,University of Oxford ,Oxford ,United Kingdom
Holmes, Maxx;
Affiliation
Non-Clinical Safety, Pre-Clinical Sciences ,GlaxoSmithKline, Upper Providence ,Collegeville ,PA ,United States
Chaudhary, Khuram W.;
Affiliation
Non-Clinical Safety, Pre-Clinical Sciences ,GlaxoSmithKline, Upper Providence ,Collegeville ,PA ,United States
Rossman, Eric I.;
Affiliation
Department of Computer Science ,University of Oxford ,Oxford ,United Kingdom
Rodriguez, Blanca

Drug-induced changes in cardiac contractility (inotropy) can lead to cardiotoxicity, a major cause of discontinuation in drug development. Preclinical approaches to assess cardiac inotropy are imperfect, with in vitro assays limited to stem cell-derived or adult human primary cardiomyocytes. Human mechanistic in silico modelling and simulations are already successfully applied for proarrhythmia prediction, contributing to cardiac safety assessment strategies in early drug development. In this study, we investigated their ability to predict drug-induced effects on cardiac inotropy. We considered a validation set of 28 neutral/negative inotropic and 13 positive inotropic reference compounds and simulated their effects on cell contractility via ion channel inhibition and perturbation of nine biomechanical modelling parameters, respectively. For each compound, a wide range of drug concentrations was simulated in an experimentally calibrated control population of 323 human ventricular in silico cells. Simulated biomarkers indicating drug-induced inotropic effects were compared with in vitro preclinical data from the literature. Computer simulations predicted drug-induced inotropic changes observed in vitro for 25 neutral/negative inotropes and 10 positive inotropes. Predictions of negative inotropic changes were quantitatively in agreement for 86% of tested drugs. Active tension peak was identified as the biomarker with highest predictive potential. This study describes the validation and application of an in silico cardiac electromechanical model for drug safety evaluation, combining ion channel inhibition data and information on potential inotropic mechanisms to predict inotropic changes. Furthermore, a route for its integration as part of a preclinical drug safety assessment strategy is outlined.

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

License Holder: Copyright © 2025 Trovato, Longobardi, Passini, Beattie, Holmes, Chaudhary, Rossman and Rodriguez.

Use and reproduction: