Razan Elkahlout, Sawsan G A A Mohammed, Ahmed Najjar, Thomas Farrell, Hilal Al Rifai, Nader Al-Dewik, M Walid Qoronfleh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Maternal and neonatal health (women during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postnatal period) presents a spectrum of healthcare challenges, including preterm birth, preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and gestational diabetes mellitus. While genomic investigations have shed light on many of these topics, protein biomarker discovery, a pivotal aspect of such research, holds promise in offering insights into disease diagnosis, progression, and prognosis. This review paper aims to explore the landscape of proteomics research pertaining to the aforementioned disorders. In the search for viable biomarkers, existing ones are either outdated or lack specificity and new ones being investigated do not commonly make it to the validation stage. In this review, the reasons for the gap between the biomarker discovery stage and the clinical validation stage are evaluated, in addition to what steps are being taken to mitigate the unexpectedly slow scientific and clinical progress. Notably, this paper also delves into the ethnic disparities found in maternal and neonatal health research, as well as how AI is currently being used to alleviate socioeconomic and ethnic disparities, as well as its advantages for the analysis of large "omics" datasets. We anticipate this investigation will provide critical, invaluable information for researchers, medical professionals, and policy decision-makers in this field to improve overall maternal and neonatal health outcomes.
期刊介绍:
PROTEOMICS - Clinical Applications has developed into a key source of information in the field of applying proteomics to the study of human disease and translation to the clinic. With 12 issues per year, the journal will publish papers in all relevant areas including:
-basic proteomic research designed to further understand the molecular mechanisms underlying dysfunction in human disease
-the results of proteomic studies dedicated to the discovery and validation of diagnostic and prognostic disease biomarkers
-the use of proteomics for the discovery of novel drug targets
-the application of proteomics in the drug development pipeline
-the use of proteomics as a component of clinical trials.