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A Quantitative Systems Pharmacology Perspective on the Importance of Parameter Identifiability

Anna Sher, Steven Niederer, Gary R. Mirams, Anna Kirpichnikova, Richard Allen, Pras Pathmanathan, David J. Gavaghan, Piet H. van der Graaf, Denis Noble

2022Bulletin of Mathematical Biology43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is an inherent tension in Quantitative Systems Pharmacology (QSP) between the need to incorporate mathematical descriptions of complex physiology and drug targets with the necessity of developing robust, predictive and well-constrained models. In addition to this, there is no "gold standard" for model development and assessment in QSP. Moreover, there can be confusion over terminology such as model and parameter identifiability; complex and simple models; virtual populations; and other concepts, which leads to potential miscommunication and misapplication of methodologies within modeling communities, both the QSP community and related disciplines. This perspective article highlights the pros and cons of using simple (often identifiable) vs. complex (more physiologically detailed but often non-identifiable) models, as well as aspects of parameter identifiability, sensitivity and inference methodologies for model development and analysis. The paper distills the central themes of the issue of identifiability and optimal model size and discusses open challenges.

Topics & Concepts

IdentifiabilityComputer scienceTerminologyInferenceConfusionPerspective (graphical)Management scienceRisk analysis (engineering)Machine learningArtificial intelligenceMedicineEngineeringLinguisticsPsychologyPhilosophyPsychoanalysisGene Regulatory Network AnalysisComputational Drug Discovery MethodsStatistical Methods in Clinical Trials
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