PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Data scientists unveil AI framework to identify new indications for existing drugs

Klick Applied Sciences presents new way to make drug repurposing more efficient at leading AI conference

2023-12-15
(Press-News.org) Scientists at Klick Applied Sciences have created an artificial intelligence framework that can rapidly identify new use cases for existing therapeutics, according to findings presented Friday at the NeurIPS conference that could greatly improve the drug repurposing process and transform the pharmaceutical industry.

The team debuted their algorithm, called LOVENet, a Large Optimized Vector Embeddings Network which integrates two cutting-edge AI technologies: large language model (LLM), and structured knowledge graph technology, which mathematically represents the relationships between drugs and diseases to offer a fresh perspective on new potential therapeutic applications.

Drug repurposing, the practice of identifying new therapeutic indications for existing drugs, has long been an area of interest due to the time and cost constraints associated with traditional drug development. Some reports estimate about 30 to 40 percent of new drugs and biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) can be considered repurposed or repositioned products. 

Jouhyun Jeon, lead scientist and principal investigator at Klick Applied Sciences, said LOVENet is designed to address these challenges by seamlessly integrating advanced machine-learning methods with extensive biological and clinical datasets. Her team found LOVENet to be successful in highlighting drug associations with other disease states already confirmed by scientific literature. One example they cited was a drug initially approved to treat heart rhythm disturbances that has also been shown to be helpful in treating seizures.

“The usual path for developing new medicines can take more than a decade,” Jeon said. “By using AI to speed up the repurposing process, we hope to shave years off current timelines, identify more uses for existing drugs, and ultimately provide physicians and patients with more treatment options across a wide range of therapeutic areas.”

Klick’s EVP of Data Science Alfred Whitehead said, “LOVENet is an important first step in a new era of drug discovery. We think it holds amazing promise to lower development costs, while increasing time efficiency and risk mitigation. It  could also greatly assist in streamlining regulatory pathways, expanding market opportunities, while addressing unmet medical needs.”

Today’s news is the latest glimpse into how Klick has been embracing AI and machine learning in a number of innovative ways. Earlier this week, the company announced the Klick Prize, an internal challenge team members who contribute the best AI ideas for life sciences clients. In October, it announced groundbreaking research in Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health around the AI model it created to detect Type 2 diabetes using 10 seconds of voice. The agency also recently launched the first ChatGPT plugin for life sciences companies in the U.S. and announced an exclusive North American partnership with AI pioneer Rainbird Technologies.

About Klick Applied Sciences (including Klick Labs)

Klick Applied Sciences’ diverse team of data scientists, engineers, and biological scientists conducts scientific research and develops AI/ML and software solutions as part of the company’s work to support commercial efforts using its proven business, scientific, medical, and technological expertise. Its 2019 Voice Assistants Medical Name Comprehension study laid the scientific foundation for rigorously testing voice assistant consumer devices in a controlled manner. Klick Applied Sciences is part of the Klick Group of companies, which also includes Klick Health (including Klick Katalyst and btwelve), Klick Media Group, Klick Consulting, Klick Ventures, and Sensei Labs. Established in 1997, Klick has  offices in New York, Philadelphia, Toronto, London, São Paulo, and Singapore.Klick has consistently been ranked a Best Managed Company, Great Place to Work, Best Workplace for Women, Best Workplace for Inclusion, Best Workplace for Professional Services, and Most Admired Corporate Culture.

For more information, or a copy of the abstract, please contact Klick PR at pr@klick.com or 416-214-4977.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Strategies to limit redox electrolyte-enhanced carbon-based supercapacitor self-discharge

Strategies to limit redox electrolyte-enhanced carbon-based supercapacitor self-discharge
2023-12-15
The efficient storage of clean energy is a critical component to achieving carbon neutrality.  Capacitors are devices that store energy by separating positive and negative electrical charge, and supercapacitors (SC) are capacitors that can store and release large amounts of energy.  A specialized supercapacitor, called a redox electrolyte-enhanced SC (RE-SC), places liquid redox electrolytes, a source of ions that can be electrically charged, next to a carbon-based electrical conductor, or electrode, to achieve high energy storage density and power output.  Despite this increase in performance, RE-SCs suffer from self-discharge of stored energy, limiting their practicality.  ...

US adults eat a meal’s worth of calories of snacks in a day

2023-12-15
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Snacks constitute almost a quarter of a day’s calories in U.S. adults and account for about one-third of daily added sugar, a new study suggests. Researchers analyzing data from surveys of over 20,000 people found that Americans averaged about 400 to 500 calories in snacks a day – often more than what they consumed at breakfast – that offered little nutritional value. Though dietitians are very aware of Americans’ propensity to snack, “the magnitude of the impact ...

Revolutionary seaweed and carbonated water based hydrogel for treating skin wounds

Revolutionary seaweed and carbonated water based hydrogel for treating skin wounds
2023-12-15
Acting as the main interface between the internal and the external world, the skin is the largest and most important organ of the human body. It is frequently exposed to many types of physical injuries or wounds, including cuts, scrapes, scratches, infections, and ulcers. Unfortunately, as one ages, the skin becomes more frail and less capable of healing itself without help. With many countries experiencing a rapid rise in the aging population, the demand for treating such skin wounds has created a greater need for accessible and effective wound ...

Exploring the effects of vascularization strategies on brain organoids

Exploring the effects of vascularization strategies on brain organoids
2023-12-15
Cerebral organoids are three-dimensional, in vitro cultured brains that mimic the activities of the human brain. They have emerged as invaluable tools to comprehend evolution, disease pathogenesis, and neurodevelopmental processes. However, the development of these organoids is still in nascent stages with several limitations that hinder their broad applications. A major obstacle is the absence of a functional vasculature that can restrict the size of organoids, trigger cell death, and prevent cell differentiation in the organoids. To address ...

Trip or treat?

Trip or treat?
2023-12-15
NEWS RELEASE EMBARGOED UNTIL FRI, DEC. 15 – 5:00 A.M. Eastern   Contact Colleen McDonald - Sr. Consultant, Earned Media 414.801.3146 | cmcdonald@mcw.edu   Trip or Treat? Scientists at the Medical College of Wisconsin make strides in designing non-hallucinogenic psychedelic treatments that may accelerate research on mental health benefits; research findings published in Nature Communications. Milwaukee, Wis. – Dec. 15, 2023 – There is nothing magic about the recent increase ...

Computational model captures the elusive transition states of chemical reactions

Computational model captures the elusive transition states of chemical reactions
2023-12-15
CAMBRIDGE, MA — During a chemical reaction, molecules gain energy until they reach what’s known as the transition state — a point of no return from which the reaction must proceed. This state is so fleeting that it’s nearly impossible to observe it experimentally. The structures of these transition states can be calculated using techniques based on quantum chemistry, but that process is extremely time-consuming. A team of MIT researchers has now developed an alternative approach, based on machine learning, that can calculate ...

Parents underestimate the importance of guided play in education, finds US study

2023-12-15
Child psychologists have long known that play is essential for children’s cognitive development because it boosts their social, physical, and emotional skills. But beginning in the 21st century, specialists repeatedly sounded the alarm that ‘play is under siege’ for US children. Kids were playing less, and – it was feared – with a lesser quality. But are today’s parents sufficiently aware of the importance of letting their children play? Yes, found a team of researchers who tested this through a survey of the opinions of 1,172 US parents. Their results showed that today’s ...

Responsible stewardship over ultrathin materials research

Responsible stewardship over ultrathin materials research
2023-12-15
To an everyday consumer, the best gadgets on the market have the highest speed, the largest memory, and the longest battery life. Chasing this demand, the forefront of research often only considers these tangible performance metrics when innovating and designing next-generation electronics. In the wake of this technological stampede, the long-term environmental impacts lie obscured and neglected under the dust.   Researchers at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) hope to be the catalyst for sustainability-driven science. Assistant Professor Ang Yee Sin from the Science, Mathematics ...

Large sequence models for sequential decision-making

Large sequence models for sequential decision-making
2023-12-15
Transformer architectures have facilitated the development of large-scale and general-purpose sequence models for prediction tasks in natural language processing and computer vision, e.g., GPT-3 and Swin Transformer. Although originally designed for prediction problems, it is natural to inquire about their suitability in another important field, sequential decision-making and reinforcement learning problems, which are typically beset by long-standing issues involving sample efficiency, credit assignment, and partial observability, etc. In recent years, sequence models, especially the Transformer, have attracted increasing interest in the RL communities, spawning ...

New red galaxies turn out to be already known blue galaxies

New red galaxies turn out to be already known blue galaxies
2023-12-15
Not all discoveries turn out to be actual new discoveries. This was the case for the extremely red objects (EROs) found in James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) data. Analysis shows that they are very similar to blue-excess dust obscured galaxies (BluDOGs) already reported in Subaru Telescope data. Quasars, some of the brightest objects in the Universe, are driven by a supermassive black hole with a mass that can reach more than a billion times that of the Sun. These objects are the focus of much research, but how ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UTA professor earns NSF grants to study human-computer interaction

How playing songs to Darwin’s finches helped UMass Amherst biologists confirm link between environment and the emergence of new species

A holy grail found for catalytic alkane activation

Galápagos finches could be singing a different song after repeated drought—one that leads to speciation

Hidden “tails” slow marine snow, impacting deep sea carbon transfer and storage

Seed dispersal “crisis” may impact plant species’ future in Europe

Nitrogen deposition has shifted European forest plant ranges westward over decades

Loss of lake ice has wide-ranging environmental and societal consequences

From chaos to structure

Variability in when and how cells divide promotes healthy development in embryos

Hidden biological processes can affect how the ocean stores carbon

European forest plants are migrating westwards, nitrogen main cause

Macronutrient and micronutrient intake among US women ages 20 to 44

Payments by drug and medical device manufacturers to us peer reviewers of major medical journals

One-third of cancer-related crowdfunding campaigns share medical financial hardship and health-related social needs, new research shows

Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals

Checking out the boundaries: Milestone in lipidomics achieved

SNU-KAIST researchers jointly develop a new visible light communication encryption technology using chiral nanoparticles

HPTN 091 study shows encouraging uptake and adherence to oral PrEP among transgender women

Gonzalez receives award to study causes of racial disparities in amputation rates in Indiana

Mount Sinai opens state-of-the-art center for patients with complex conditions including Lyme disease and long COVID

$14M NIH grant funds gene-editing research for rare metabolic diseases at Penn and CHOP

One experiment: The brain’s landscapers

AI-supported dermatology: Now for darker skin tones too, thanks to a new data set

Understanding how smiling influences relationship building during real-life conversations

British Heart Foundation Data Science Centre launches first open challenge to explore AI ECG potential

Heart failure, atrial fibrillation & coronary heart disease linked to cognitive impairment

To make children better fact-checkers, expose them to more misinformation — with oversight

Renowned psychiatrist professor Celso Arango advocates for primary prevention in mental health

Ketamine pioneer Dr. Carlos A. Zarate Jr. reshapes depression treatment landscape

[Press-News.org] Data scientists unveil AI framework to identify new indications for existing drugs
Klick Applied Sciences presents new way to make drug repurposing more efficient at leading AI conference