About this Research Topic
With this Research Topic, we aim to highlight both the challenges and the many opportunities inherent in stroke omics and epidemiologic research among individuals of underrepresented populations, with a particular focus on individuals of African and Hispanic/Latino ancestry. The role of demographic, socioeconomic, and educational factors in these populations and their possible link with genetic factors are of particular interest. We would welcome large-scale international collaborations and multi-omics studies. We will also seek reviews and brief reports of individuals’ genomics (epigenetics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, etc.) studies. The overall goal is ultimately to demonstrate that multi-ancestry studies considering multi-omics and epidemiological factors in individuals of diverse ancestry will result in robust and more informative studies that would not only advance the field, but serve as a catalyst for the inevitable future of personalized medicine in general and stroke prevention and treatment in particular.
We welcome the submission of manuscripts addressing the diversity in stroke omics research and epidemiology in the broadest sense: diversity of research participants, data type, biological samples, and so on. In addition, we are interested in original research, mini-reviews, reviews, and short letters/brief communications. We will also consider studies that address the challenges of genomics and epidemiology of stroke research in underrepresented populations such as Australian Aborigines and Torre Strait Islanders, Native Americans, and Native Hawaiians.
Keywords: Stroke, Genome-wide association study, Transcriptomics, Epigenetics, Health disparity, Epidemiology
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.