Editorial
New Journal Launch: Global Clinical and Translational Research
Accepted October 30, 2018
We are proud to
announce the launch of Global Clinical
and Translational Research, a new journal that aims to promote clinical and
translational research in the genomic era from a global perspective. The journal will (1) provide a unified platform of research
communication for basic scientists, medical doctors, other clinical health
professionals, social scientists and social workers to share the most recent
advances in all areas of clinical and translational sciences; (2) introduce new
techniques and methodology such as genomics-based techniques and approaches to
design and perform a new generation of clinical research; (3) foster collaborative
clinical research from a global perspective.
In the first two decades of
the 21st century, strategies for conducting biomedical research have been profoundly influenced by the completion of the
Human Genome Projects (HGP) [1]. The HGP is properly regarded as the significant groundbreaking
accomplishment in human biology as we moved from the 20th into the
21st century. Related projects such as the
International Haplotype Map of the Human
Genome Project (HapMap) and the development of the
tools of bioinformatics computer programs, especially the invention of
genome-wide association techniques, have made it possible to dissect genetic
architecture of complex human diseases and health, and to identify genetic
variants that may impact the response of individuals or populations to
pharmaceutical treatments, environmental exposures to chemicals or toxicants
and psychosocial stressors. The findings from such
research over the past decade have accelerated discoveries such as
identification of molecular targets of drugs and other environmental or dietary
compounds as well as novel targets for further research and development of
other ligands that may become new therapeutic
medications including and offer new evidence for population-based
interventions, or early and precision diagnostics.
With
the increasingly available tools of biotechnology in genomics and other "omics," the
then U.S. President Obama announced the precision medicine initiative in 2015.
The goal of this initiative
is to pioneer a new model of biomedical and health research that promises to accelerate biomedical discoveries and translate them into new tools, knowledge, and therapies for clinicians to select which treatments
will work best for which patients and for public health professionals to better decide when and how preventative measures should
be taken. The
concept of precision medicine is to develop treatment and prevention strategies
that take individual variability [2] into
account, which may involve the individual’s genetic heterogeneity, life course
experiences, and lifestyle. Identifying those individual factors will require a
series of research activities across different populations to accommodate
variation in the genetic background, including ethnicity, as well as local or
regional environmental and dietary factors.
This new journal will be a vehicle to communicate those new
findings of clinical and translational research in the era of genomics or other
"omics." Without a doubt, following the precision
medicine initiative, clinical and translational research will be a robust
global enterprise over the next few decades; therefore, with a wide application
of the new tools of biotechnology, more and more studies will focus on
discovery in human subjects through observational and experimental approaches.
Findings from such studies can be translated not only into basic research
hypotheses that should lead to novel ideas for mechanistic biological research
or biology but also into clinical practices such as precision diagnosis and
treatment, preventive interventions at a population level or enhanced
environmental health for entire communities [3]. The
scope of translational research must significantly extend beyond the traditionally
defined "from bench to bedside and back again" to a broad multidisciplinary
and multilayered process of discovery, implementation, and global public health
impact.
The journal will be edited by a
multidisciplinary team lead by Drs. Claude Hughes and Fengyu Zhang. Dr. Hughes’
broad experience includes pharmaceutical clinical trials; the practice of
Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility;
modeling and biomarker development; basic, clinical and population research in
the health of women across the lifespan, and the impact of dietary and environmental
chemicals in reproductive, developmental and translational toxicology. Dr.
Zhang's research expertise focus conducting multidisciplinary research on
genetic and environmental determinants of complex human disorders and
population health, clinical trial-based pharmacogenomics of treatment response,
as well as biomarker discovery; and he has a strong background in quantitative
and data science.
The journal accepts original
research articles, reviews, mini-reviews, case reports, short notes, and rapid
communications covering all aspects of clinical and translational research.
Papers about novel applications of statistical methods or data science are also welcomed.
Editors-in-Chief
Claude Hughes, MD PhD
Fengyu Zhang, Ph.D. MS
REFERENCES
1. Collins
FS, Morgan M, Patrinos A. The Human Genome Project: lessons from large-scale
biology. Science. 2003; 300 (5617):286-90.
2. Collins
FS, Varmus H. A new initiative on precision medicine. N Engl J Med.
2015;372(9):793-5.
3. Collman
GW, Berridge BR, Hall JE, Woychik R, Zeldin DC, Birnbaum LS. NIEHS: making a
mark on translational research science. Environ Health Perspect. 2018;126 (8):
081001.
How to cite the article:
Hughes C, Zhang F. New Journal Launch: Global Clinical
and Translational Research. Glob Clin Transl
Res. 2019; 1(1):2-3. DOI:10.36316/gcatr.01.0001
Copyright © 2019 by Global Clinical and Translational Research.