About this Research Topic
The goal of this research topic is to cover research that employs systems thinking, phenomics strategy and multi-omics technologies to address imminent challenges in immunotherapy. We use the term phenomics to broadly refer to all micro- and macro-phenotypic manifestations that go beyond ones genome, including but not limited to transcriptomic, epigenomic, proteomic, metabolomic, microbiomic, clincial biochemistry, and cellular phenotypes, measured in a given individual. In particular, we would like to see studies that improve current treatment regime, expand clinical indications, offer novel therapeutic targets, provide biomarkers for patient stratification, develop innovative clinical testing, and dissect molecular mechanism of immune cell function in both health and disease, as pertinent to the applications in immunotherapy.
The scope and themes covered will include, but not limited to:
1. Expertised views on phenomics, immunology and human diseases: advance, technologies, challenges and future;
2. Genetic association studies linking phenotypes and genetic variants in immune response, IMIDs or immuno-oncology;
3. Utilising phenomics to develop translational biomarkers that can be measured in a clinical cohort to quantitatively assess diagnostic and therapeutic benefits in the context of IMIDs and Immuno-oncology;
4. Longitudinal or case-control phenomic studies to advance our knowledge in disease pathogenesis and therapy;
5. Functional studies of outcomes from phenomics study that leads to the knowledge discovery involving immune response, IMIDs or Immuno-oncology;
6. The development of the state-of-the-art approaches, open-source tools, standardization protocols, and open-access databases supporting phenomics;
7. Utilization of phenomics approaches in developing new drugs that enhance immunotherapy.
We welcome the submission of Original Research, Reviews, Mini-reviews and Perspective articles.
Keywords: translational phenomics, cancer, immunotherapy
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.