Multiomics & Biomarker Discovery | Open call for papers

Go to author guidelines      Request additional information


Dr. Nelson Soares (ORCID | Scopus Author ID | Google Scholar ID)
Associate Editor for Multiomics & Biomarker Discovery

Article types
Short communication; Full research paper; Mini-review; Full-length review paper

Journal information
Scimago - Journal & Country Rank | Journal rank 2024: 0.660
Scopus | 2024 (as of 5/1/25): 4.6
About this journal

Publisher information
AboutScience


Multiomics and Non‑Invasive Diagnostics: Advances in Circulating Biomarkers

The rapid evolution of circulating biomarker research is transforming precision medicine. From early disease detection to treatment monitoring and patient stratification, body fluid-based biomarkers (blood, urine, sweat, and others) provide a powerful, minimally invasive window into dynamic biological processes. This perspective highlights how multi-omics integration and non-invasive diagnostic strategies are converging to accelerate both discovery and clinical translation.

We invite researchers and clinicians to contribute to this topic, which aims to explore innovative approaches, applications, and challenges in circulating biomarker research and implementation. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

• Human Health: Applications of circulating biomarkers in precision medicine, early diagnosis, treatment monitoring, and personalized therapeutic strategies.
• Technological Innovations: Liquid biopsy technologies, multi-omics integration, and AI-driven analytical approaches for biomarker discovery, validation, and interpretation.
• Disease-Specific Insights: Studies in cancer, cardiovascular, neurodegenerative, infectious, autoimmune, and metabolic diseases.
• Translational and Clinical Integration: Approaches bridging discovery and clinical application, including validation studies and patient stratification strategies.
• Future Perspectives: Ethical considerations, standardization, data sharing, and frameworks to support reproducibility and clinical implementation.