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Development of a pharmaceutical database as an aid to the nonclinical detection of drug-induced cardiac toxicity
De Alwis, D., Foley, C. M., Herman, E., Hill, A. P., Hoffmann, P. K., Kanda, Y., Kaushik, E., Pierson, J., Puglisi, R., Shi, H., Yang, X., & Pugsley, M. K. (2024). Development of a pharmaceutical database as an aid to the nonclinical detection of drug-induced cardiac toxicity. Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods, Article 107507. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vascn.2024.107507
The Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI) Cardiac Safety Committee designed and created a publicly accessible database with an initial set of 128 pharmacologically defined pharmaceutical agents, many with known cardiotoxic properties. The database includes specific information about each compound that could be useful in evaluating hypotheses around mechanisms of drug-induced cardiac toxicity or for development of novel cardiovascular safety assays. Data on each of the compounds was obtained from published literature and online sources (e.g., DrugBank.ca and International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology (IUPHAR) / British Pharmacological Society (BPS) Guide to PHARMACOLOGY) and was curated by 10 subject matter experts. The database includes information such as compound name, pharmacological mode of action, characterized cardiac mode of action, type of cardiac toxicity, known clinical cardiac toxicity profile, animal models used to evaluate the cardiotoxicity profile, routes of administration, and toxicokinetic parameters (i.e., Cmax). Data from both nonclinical and clinical studies are included for each compound. The user-friendly web interface allows for multiple approaches to search the database and is also intended to provide a means for the submission of new data/compounds from relevant users. This will ensure that the database is constantly updated and remains current. Such a data repository will not only aid the HESI working groups in defining drugs for use in any future studies, but safety scientists can also use the database as a vehicle of support for broader cardiovascular safety studies or exploring mechanisms of toxicity associated with certain pharmacological modes of action.