A theoretical model for predicting morphology evolution of immiscible polymer blends in a corotating twin-screw extruder was described with a new blend's constitutive equation (the Lee and Park model). This theory describes the overall morphology of immiscible binary blends in terms of an interfacia
The development and validation of a computational model to predict rat liver microsomal clearance
β Scribed by Cheng Chang; David B. Duignan; Kjell D. Johnson; Pil H. Lee; George S. Cowan; Eric M. Gifford; Charles J. Stankovic; Christopher S. Lepsy; Chad L. Stoner
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 227 KB
- Volume
- 98
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
As the cost of discovering and developing new pharmaceutically relevant compounds continues to rise, it is increasingly important to select the right molecules to prosecute very early in drug discovery. The development of high throughput in vitro assays of hepatic metabolic clearance has allowed for vast quantities of data generation; however, these large screens are still costly and remain dependant on animal usage. To further expand the value of these screens and ultimately aid in animal usage reduction, we have developed an in silico model of rat liver microsomal (RLM) clearance. This model combines a large amount of rat clearance data (n ΒΌ 27,697) generated at multiple Pfizer laboratories to represent the broadest possible chemistry space. The model predicts RLM stability (with 82% accuracy and a kappa value of 0.65 for test data set) based solely on chemical structural inputs, and provides a clear assessment of confidence in the prediction. The current in silico model should help accelerate the drug discovery process by using confidence-based stability-driven prioritization, and reduce cost by filtering out the most unstable/undesirable molecules. The model can also increase efficiency in the evaluation of chemical series by optimizing iterative testing and promoting rational drug design.
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This study was conducted to comprehensively evaluate the performance of various allometric scaling methods for the prediction of human clearance. Allometric scaling was used to predict clearance for 103 compounds, for which clearance data in the rat, dog, monkey, and humans were available. Allometry
In Table 3, the MAE value for three-species allometric scaling using the rule of exponents should be 6.44, not 11.03 as originally cited. This error resulted from an incorrect predicted value for one of the 103 compounds in the dataset (nicotine; incorrect error of 479.6 mL/min/kg rather than the co
## Abstract ## BACKGROUND. The surgical treatment of spinal epidural metastasis is evolving. To be a surgical candidate, a patient should have a life expectancy of at least 3 months. Estimation of survival by experienced specialists has proven to be unreliable. ## METHODS. The Cox proportional h