The background:
Those who have
followed the drug discovery literature over the last decade or so will have
become aware of a publication genre that can be described as ‘retrospective
data analysis of large proprietary data sets’ or, more succinctly, as ‘Ro5
envy’.
The problem:
Although data analysts
frequently tout the statistical significance of the trends that their analysis
has revealed, weak trends can be statistically significant without being
remotely interesting.
This is especially likely to occur when data are “binned”
into a smaller number of categories before being analyzed, thereby hiding
variation and making correlations appear stronger than they really are. Since
many published analyses use proprietary, unavailable data, Kenny and Montanari
constructed model “noisy” data sets and looked for correlations in the primary
data and the binned data. They found that correlations in the binned data were
inflated. Perhaps counter-intuitively, the effect actually gets more pronounced
the larger the data set.
Having described the problem, Kenny and Montanari go on to
question some recent high-profile papers correlating, for example,
lipophilicity with pharmacological promiscuity, or the percentage of
sp3-hybridized carbons (Fsp3) with solubility (see also here). In the latter
case, all the data were publicly available, and a reanalysis with the primary
data as opposed to binned data caused the correlation coefficient (r) to drop
from 0.972 to 0.247!
Graphical representation of data comes under heavy scrutiny
too. In particular, the common practice of subdividing data points into small
numbers of categories (often red, yellow, and green) can make these categories
appear discrete when the underlying data are better described as a continuum.
The overall message is that weak correlations may lead to
misguided strategies:
To restrict values of
properties such as lipophilicity more stringently than is justified by trends
in the data is to deny one’s own drug-hunting teams room to maneuver while
yielding the initiative to hungrier, more agile competitors.
There is something to this, though acting on it is not
without risk. As the old saying goes, nobody gets fired for buying IBM. Most
drug discovery efforts fail, but if you fail making conventional compounds,
you’re less likely to come under fire than if you fail by doing something
outside the accepted norm.
But whatever you do, it’s worth remembering:
The human liver
remains an effective antidote to the hubris of the drug designer.
4 comments:
Thanks for highlighting this, Dan, and honoured that you quoted so freely from the text! Actually one would expect correlations for averaged data to improve as larger random samples are drawn from a population. This because the probability of a large deviation of a sample mean from the true mean decreases with the size of the sample. This is also the basis for much of statistical mechanics. We're hoping that the article will get people asking more questions and not being afraid to challenge (the institutional 'wisdom' of a Pharma company can be quite intimidating).
This is a paper long overdue and of course Peter is the perfect person to have written it. Bravo.
Nate Silver called this one, generically.
And it was picked up by ITP
http://pipeline.corante.com/archives/2013/02/08/all_those_druglikeness_papers_a_bit_too_neat_to_be_true.php
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