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Inflation of correlation in the pursuit of drug-likeness

by: PeterW Kenny, CarlosA Montanari
In Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design (2013), pp. 1-13, doi:10.1007/s10822-012-9631-5  Key: citeulike:12007769

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Abstract

Drug-likeness is a frequently invoked, although not always precisely defined, concept in drug discovery. Opinions on drug-likeness are to a large extent shaped by the relationships that are observed between surrogate measures of drug-likeness (e.g. aqueous solubility; permeability; pharmacological promiscuity) and fundamental physicochemical properties (e.g. lipophilicity; molecular size). This article draws on examples from the literature to highlight approaches to data analysis that exaggerate trends in data and the term correlation inflation is introduced in the context of drug discovery. Averaging groups of data points prior to analysis is a common cause of correlation inflation and results from analysis of binned continuous data should always be treated with caution.


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