4.7 Article

A Systems Approach to Refine Disease Taxonomy by Integrating Phenotypic and Molecular Networks

Journal

EBIOMEDICINE
Volume 31, Issue -, Pages 79-91

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2018.04.002

Keywords

Disease taxonomy; Network medicine; Disease phenotypes; Molecular profiles; Precision medicine

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61105055, 81230086, 81673833]
  2. National Science and Technology Major Project for New Drugs Research and Development of China [2017ZX09301-059, 2017ZX09503-001-003]
  3. National Key RD Project [2017YFC1703506]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central public welfare research institutes [ZZ0908029, 2017JBM020, DUT16ZD227, DUT17ZD222, DUT18ZD301]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P50- 533 HG004233-CEGS]
  6. MapGen grant [U01HL108630, P01 HL083069, U01 534 HL065899, P01 HL105339, R01HL111759, 1P01HL132825-01, RC HL10154301]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The International Classification of Diseases (LCD) relies on clinical features and lags behind the current understanding of the molecular specificity of disease pathobiology, necessitating approaches that incorporate growing biomedical data for classifying diseases to meet the needs of precision medicine. Our analysis revealed that the heterogeneous molecular diversity of disease chapters and the blurred boundary between disease categories in 1CD should be further investigated. Here, we propose a new classification of diseases (NCD) by developing an algorithm that predicts the additional categories of a disease by integrating multiple networks consisting of disease phenotypes and their molecular profiles. With statistical validations from phenotype-genotype associations and interaciome networks, we demonstrate that NCD improves disease specificity owing to its overlapping categories and polyhierarchical structure. Furthermore, NCD captures the molecular diversity of diseases and defines clearer boundaries in terms of both phenotypic similarity and molecular associations, establishing a rational strategy to reform disease taxonomy. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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