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Immune biomarkers in the spectrum of childhood noncommunicable diseases

Title: Immune biomarkers in the spectrum of childhood noncommunicable diseases
Authors: C Skevaki; J Van Den Berg; N Jones; J Garssen; Peter Vuillermin; M Levin; A Landay; H Renz; PC Calder; CA Thornton
Publication Year: 2016
Subject Terms: Immunology not elsewhere classified; Science & Technology; Life Sciences & Biomedicine; Allergy; Immunology; Biomarkers; noncommunicable diseases; children; inflammation; microRNA; blood; urine; breath; mass spectrometry; EXHALED NITRIC-OXIDE; INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE; ATOPIC-DERMATITIS; CELIAC-DISEASE; ENVIRONMENTAL DETERMINANTS; ENDOTHELIAL DYSFUNCTION; AUTOIMMUNE-THYROIDITIS; CIRCULATING MICRORNAS; POTENTIAL BIOMARKERS; LUPUS-ERYTHEMATOSUS; 111799 Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified; 920499 Public Health (excl. Specific Population Health) not elsewhere classified; School of Medicine; 4206 Public health; 3204 Immunology; 3213 Paediatrics
Description: A biomarker is an accurately and reproducibly quantifiable biological characteristic that provides an objective measure of health status or disease. Benefits of biomarkers include identification of therapeutic targets, monitoring of clinical interventions, and development of personalized (or precision) medicine. Challenges to the use of biomarkers include optimizing sample collection, processing and storage, validation, and often the need for sophisticated laboratory and bioinformatics approaches. Biomarkers offer better understanding of disease processes and should benefit the early detection, treatment, and management of multiple noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). This review will consider the utility of biomarkers in patients with allergic and other immune-mediated diseases in childhood. Typically, biomarkers are used currently to provide mechanistic insight or an objective measure of disease severity, with their future role in risk stratification/disease prediction speculative at best. There are many lessons to be learned from the biomarker strategies used for cancer in which biomarkers are in routine clinical use and industry-wide standardized approaches have been developed. Biomarker discovery and validation in children with disease lag behind those in adults; given the early onset and therefore potential lifelong effect of many NCDs, there should be more studies incorporating cohorts of children. Many pediatric biomarkers are at the discovery stage, with a long path to evaluation and clinical implementation. The ultimate challenge will be optimization of prevention strategies that can be implemented in children identified as being at risk of an NCD through the use of biomarkers.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30085665; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Immune_biomarkers_in_the_spectrum_of_childhood_noncommunicable_diseases/20882911
Availability: http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30085665; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Immune_biomarkers_in_the_spectrum_of_childhood_noncommunicable_diseases/20882911
Rights: All Rights Reserved
Accession Number: edsbas.98150F0E
Database: BASE