About this Research Topic
CRC is a high-prevalence disease which continues to have relatively high mortality and no simple avoidable cause. CRC is preventable by detecting and removing adenomas using sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy screening. Due to the invasive nature and cost of endoscoppy, intermediate screening methods, such as FOBT, are used to select patients for colonoscopy. However, there is a need to identify CRC biomarkers that will improve screening, early detection and disease follow-up, and allow for more accurate tumor profiling. This will allow us to work towards the goal of state-of-the-art functional characterization of genetic variants and new therapy approaches for this disease.
This Research Topic in Frontiers in Genetics will include research articles describing work using innovative translational research to identify colorectal cancer biomarkers for personalized medicine that will improve screening, early detection and disease follow-up, and attain better tumor profiling, state-of-the-art functional characterization of genetic variants and new therapy approaches.
Bioinformatic studies are welcome, however, these should not be based solely on analysis of publicly available datasets such as TCGA. It is essential to have an independent validation cohort for statistically significant confirmation of the findings communicated.
Keywords: Colorectal Cancer, Translational Research, Biomarker, Genomics, Liquid Biopsy, Tumor Profiling, Therapy, Functional Characterization
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.